Lakki Marwat District

District in Pakistan From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Lakki Marwat (Pashto: لکي مروت ولسوالۍ, Urdu: ضلع لکی مروت) is a district in the Bannu Division of the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province of Pakistan. It was created as an administrative district on 1 July 1992, prior to which it was a tehsil of Bannu District.

Country Pakistan
Established1 July 1992
Quick facts ضلع لکی مروتلکي مروت ولسوالۍ‎, Country ...
Lakki Marwat
ضلع لکی مروت
لکي مروت ولسوالۍ
Fields in Sherikhel village
Fields in Sherikhel village
Lakki Marwat District (red) in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa
Lakki Marwat District (red) in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa
Country Pakistan
Province Khyber Pakhtunkhwa
DivisionBannu
Established1 July 1992
HeadquartersLakki Marwat
Government
  TypeDistrict Administration
  Deputy CommissionerIqbal Hussain[1]
  District Police OfficerN/A
  District Health OfficerN/A
Area
  Total
3,296 km2 (1,273 sq mi)
Population
  Total
1,040,856
  Density315.8/km2 (817.9/sq mi)
  Urban
103,045 (9.90%)
  Rural
927,403 (90.10%)
Demographics
  Main language(s)Pashto  Urdu
  HDI0.577
Literacy
  Literacy rate
  • Total:
    48.47%
  • Male:
    67.36%
  • Female:
    28.95%
Time zoneUTC+5 (PST)
Postal code
28420
Number of Tehsils3
Websitelakkimarwat.kp.gov.pk
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Geography

The district is located in a southern part of Khyber Paktunkhwa. It borders Karak and Bannu districts to the north, Tank district to the west, Dera Ismail Khan district to the south, and Mianwali district of Punjab to the east.

The district is a combination of mountains and sandy plains. The mountainous areas are along the boundaries of the district especially in the east, southeast, southwest and northwest. In the southeast, the Marwat range separates Lakki Marwat from the Dera Ismail Khan district while in the east the Karak Niazi range separates it from the Mianwali District. It is surrounded by Baittani range on the west and southwest, which separates it from Tank District and South Waziristan districts.The general elevation of these hills ranges from 500 to 1000 meters above the sea level. The Kurram river flows through the district from northwest to the southeast and joins the Indus River south of Isakhel town. One of its important tributary is Gambila river, also known as the Tochi. The major part of this basin is an alluvial plain. A northern portion of this plain is situated chiefly in the Kurram Gambila Doab and irrigated by the Kurram river. It is a flat sandy area. The southern part is made up of undulating dunes of sand, furrowed at regular intervals by deep torrent beds which carry the drainage of the Marwat and Baittani ranges to the Gambila. It is good for cultivation, water table is quite deep below the soil surface. In the western portion of the district, the soil is fairly stiff clay covered by a layer of stones at the foot of the hills. The whole district is intersected by numerous hill torrents and deep ravines. The general elevation of the plain area is about 200 to 300 meters above sea level.

Administration

Lakki Marwat district is subdivided into four Tehsils:

More information Tehsil, Area (km2) ...
Tehsil[4] Area

(km2)[5]

Pop.

(2023)

Density

(ppl/km2)

(2023)

Literacy rate

(2023)[6]

Union Councils
Bettani Tehsil 132 35,571 269.48 31.62%
Ghazni Khel Tehsil 1,153 329,775 286.01 54.29%
Lakki Marwat Tehsil 1,388 341,693 246.18 50.06%
Sari Naurang Tehsil 623 333,817 535.82 42.66%
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The district has three municipal committees.[7] There are 157 mauzas (the smallest revenue unit).[7]

Provincial Assembly

More information Member of Provincial Assembly, Party Affiliation ...
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Demographics

Population

More information Year, Pop. ...
Historical population
YearPop.±% p.a.
1951117,612    
1961153,126+2.67%
1972225,529+3.58%
1981288,759+2.78%
1998490,025+3.16%
2017902,541+3.27%
20231,040,856+2.40%
Sources:[8]
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As of the 2023 census, Lakki Marwat district has 131,800 households and a population of 1,040,856. The district has a sex ratio of 102.61 males to 100 females and a literacy rate of 48.47%: 67.36% for males and 28.95% for females. 344,296 (33.22% of the surveyed population) are under 10 years of age. 103,089 (9.90%) live in urban areas.[2] Pashto was the predominant language, spoken by 99.66% of the population.[9]

Religion

More information Religious group, Pop. ...
Religion in contemporary Lakki Marwat District
Religious
group
1941[10] 2017[4] 2023[11]
Pop. % Pop. % Pop. %
Islam 100,551 92.82% 901,932 99.98% 1,034,204 99.80%
Hinduism 6,954 6.42% 16 ~0% 24 ~0%
Sikhism 827 0.76% N/a N/a 12 ~0%
Christianity 0 0.00% 43 ~0% 2,040 0.20%
Others 0 0.00% 147 0.02% 20 ~0%
Total Population 108,332 100% 902,138 100% 1,036,300[a] 100%
Note: 1941 census data is for Lakki Marwat tehsil of erstwhile Bannu district, which roughly corresponds to contemporary Lakki Marwat district excluding the former Frontier Region Lakki Marwat. District and tehsil borders have changed since 1941.
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Climate

The region has all the characteristics of a desert due to its sand dunes, scorching heat and dry weather. Summers are hot, while winters are moderately cool. The summer season begins from early May and continues till late September. June and July are the hottest months with a maximum temperature range of 42 to 45 degree Celsius and a minimum temperature range of about 29 to 35 degree Celsius. Periodic sand storms rage through the area during May and June due to the prevalent low humidity. The hot wind, locally known as Lu blows across the district in these months. The cool wave starts in October. Late November, December, January and February and early March are the winter months. Though the daytime temperature in winter is not that low, however there is always a sharp decrease in nights. The mean maximum and minimum temperatures during this period are 20 and 4 degree Celsius respectively. Rainfall is rare and sporadic and generally rains occur in July and August.

Transport

Lakki Marwat was connected with Mari Indus through a narrow gauge railway line during the Raj. The city, a tehsil of Bannu then, was a railway junction. One line went to Bannu, its district, and the other to Tank. The extent of railways network has ever since defined the limits of the settled area bordering the tribal area to its west. The railway track has since been uprooted and the area now is connected through a network of roads. A detailed account of the rise and fall of this particular railway junction was published in the Daily Dawn .

Notable people

Neighboring areas

See also

References

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