More than 430 people have died in two Indian states from a days-long heatwave that has seen temperatures nudging 50 degrees Celsius, officials said Monday.
Officials warned the toll was almost certain to rise, with
figures still being collected in some parts of the hard-hit Telangana state in
the south of the country, and with no end in sight to the searing conditions.
Large parts of India, including national capital New Delhi,
have endured days of sweltering heat, prompting fears of power cuts. But the
highest temperatures have been recorded in Telangana and neighbouring Andhra
Pradesh state.
Andhra Pradesh authorities are urging labourers and others
not to work long hours in the heat of the day after 246 people died from the
high temperatures there in the last week.
Another 188 people have died in Telangana, mostly since the
middle of last week, although numbers were still being confirmed and were
highly likely to rise, D. Vani, an official with the state’s disaster
management department, said.
Several deaths have also been reported in the northwestern
desert state of Rajasthan in recent days including a woman who collapsed and
died on the roadside in Bundi city, the Press Trust of India said.
In the eastern city of Kolkata, taxi unions have urged
drivers to stay off the roads between 11am and 4pm because of the heat.
India’s weather bureau warned that “heatwave to severe
heatwave conditions would prevail” in Andhra Pradesh and Telangana in coming
days as well as in the northern states and New Delhi.
Source: – AFP
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