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Heat wave set to continue as death toll reaches 800

By Agence France-Presse in Hyderabad, India | China Daily | Updated: 2015-05-27 07:34

Officials instruct residents to stay indoors as hostipals put on alert to treat heatstroke victims

At least 800 people have died in a major heat wave that has swept across India, melting roads in New Delhi as temperatures neared 50 C.

With no end in sight to the searing conditions, hospitals were on alert to treat victims of heatstroke, and authorities advised people to stay indoors.

In the worst-hit state of Andhra Pradesh, in the south, 551 people have died in the last week as temperatures hit 47 C on Monday.

"The state government has taken up education programs through television and other media to tell people not to venture into the outside without a cap, to drink water and other measures," said P. Tulsi Rani, special commissioner for disaster management in the state.

"We have also requested NGOs and government organizations to open up drinking water camps so that water will be readily available for all the people in the towns."

Large parts of India, including the capital, New Delhi, have endured days of sweltering heat, prompting fears of power cuts as energy-guzzling air conditioners work overtime.

Heat wave set to continue as death toll reaches 800

The Hindustan Times daily said the maximum temperature in the capital hit a two-year high of 45.5 C on Monday - 5 degrees higher than the seasonal average.

The paper carried a front-page photo of a main road in the city melting in the heat, its zebra pedestrian-crossing stripes curling and spreading into the asphalt.

"It's baking hot out here - our outing has turned into a nightmare," said Meena Sheshadri, a 37-year-old tourist from the western city of Pune, who was visiting Delhi's India Gate monument with her children.

"My throat is parched, even though I've been constantly sipping water."

In Telangana state, which borders Andhra Pradesh in the south, 231 people have died in the last week as temperatures hit 48 C at the weekend.

In the western state of Orissa, 11 people were confirmed to have died from the heat.

India's Meteorological Department issued a "Red Box" warning for the state on Tuesday and Wednesday - meaning the maximum temperatures would remain above 45 C.

Another 13 people have died in the eastern state of West Bengal, where unions urged drivers in the city of Kolkata to stay off the roads during the day.

Hundreds of people - mainly from the poorest sections of society - die at the height of summer every year across the country, while tens of thousands suffer power cuts from an overburdened electricity grid.

 Heat wave set to continue as death toll reaches 800

Boys cool off in the waters of the River Sabarmati on a hot day in Ahmedabad, India, on Sunday. Amit Dave / Reuters

(China Daily 05/27/2015 page12)

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