Pakistan had not held a census for nearly two decades due to years of bickering by politicians concerned it could redraw the political map and potentially weaken their power base and access to federal funding.
The previous census in 1998 put the population of Lahore at roughly 5.1 million people. Preliminary results of the 2017 census released by the Pakistan Bureau of Statistics (PBS) late yesterday showed it had surged by a whopping 116 percent to 11,126,285 people, making it larger than Portugal, according to figures provided by the CIA World Factbook.
But they were quickly called into question by the opposition, particularly in southern Sindh province, where the early results also showed surprisingly slow growth for Pakistan's port megacity of Karachi.
The country's commercial and industrial hub had a population of 9.3 million people in 1998, and in recent years has been estimated to be home to some 20 million or more.
Pakistan Bureau of Statistics spokesman Habubullah Khattak told AFP there was no discrepency in the statistics, suggesting the difference may be down to different regulations for urban and rural zoning in the two cities.
But opposition parties complained the count had been "rigged" to preserve the PML-N power base ahead of general elections to be held by the end of next year.
Farooq Sattar, chief of Muttahida Qaumi Movement which has ruled Karachi and urban Sindh for decades, termed the early results "a great injustice".
Raza Haroon, Secretary General of Karachi-based Pak Sarzameen Party, tweeted: "Census figures seem controversial for urban centres specially #Karachi -known and acknowledged to be over 22million."
Last week the PBS released a first batch of provisional census results showing Pakistan's population has surged by more than half to 207 million.
Once confirmed in the final report, Pakistan could be set to overtake Brazil as the world's fifth most populous country, according to statistics published on the US Census Bureau website.
Punjab province, for example, could see its political grip weaken as a result of its population not rising at a similar rate to other provinces, despite the growth recorded in Lahore.
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