Record temperatures in northern India have claimed hundreds of lives in
what is believed to be the hottest summer in the country since records
began in the late 1800s.
The death toll is expected to rise with
experts forecasting temperatures approaching 50C (122F) in coming weeks.
More than 100 people are reported to have died in the state of Gujarat
where the mercury topped at 48.5C last week. At least 90 died in
Maharashtra, 35 in Rajasthan and 34 in Bihar.
Hospitals in Gujarat
have been receiving around 300 people a day suffering from food
poisoning and heat stroke, ministers said. Officials admit the figures
are only a fraction of the total as most of the casualties are found in
remote rural villages.
Wildlife and livestock has also suffered
with voluntary organisations in Gujarat reporting the deaths of bats and
crows and dozens of peacocks reported dead at a forest reserve in Uttar
Pradesh.
"Because of the heat, lakes and other water bodies have
been reduced to parched land, making dehydration common in such birds,"
said Neeraj Srivastava, a wildlife campaigner.
Even India's
northern hill stations – historically a refuge from the heat – have not
escaped. Temperatures in Shimla, recorded a peak temperature of 32.4
Celsius, eight degrees hotter than the seasonal average.
After a
drought last year, India's farmers are now impatient for the arrival of
the monsoon, which irrigates 60% of India's fields. National
meteorologists have forecast "normal" rains for this year, a relief in a
country where prices of basic foodstuffs have rocketed in recent months
due to growing shortages and structural problems with agriculture.
Forecasters
have predicted that the south-west monsoon could arrive over the
southern state of Kerala as early as today, but it is unlikely to reach
the parched north before the end of June.
"It's too long to wait.
We'll all go mad before," said Sanjoy Kumar, who sells dumplings from a
stall in south Delhi.
The capital has sweltered under intense heat
for weeks though, having endured temperatures of around 45C last week,
dust storms and scattered rain brought some relief over the weekend. The
new air-conditioned metro has seen record numbers of passengers as
travellers abandon buses, taxis and auto rickshaws.
Parts of the
city have suffered prolonged electricity blackouts and, in outlying
suburbs, water shortages. In upmarket Mehrauli village, residents were
forced to buy from private suppliers plying door to door with tankers.
In the new town of Gurgaon, entire apartment blocks have run short. In
the city of Nagpur, Maharashtra, petrol pumps ran dry after railway
wagons which normally carry fuel were switched to supply water.
The
Indian Meterological Department attributes the record heat to lack of
atmospheric humidity, hot dry winds blowing across the south-western
Thar desert and the effects of last year's El Nino cycle.
Mean
temperatures for both March and April were the highest in more than 100
years.
Columnists have wondered why, given that scorching
temperatures in India are inevitable, the heat has become the centre of
every conversation. For Jug Suraiya, a well-known writer, the answer
lies in the concept of karma and rebirth.
"That's why we moan and
bitch and bellyache," Suraiya explained in The Times of India newspaper.
"Because by doing so we hope in our next incarnation, life will, in all
senses of the term, be cool."
guardian.co.ukAnil finds rest in Mukesh's guest house
TirupatiL In promising
signs of the growing warmth in relations between the Ambanis, Anil
Ambani rested in the guest house owned by elder brother Mukeshs Reliance
Industries (RIL) at Tirumala on his way to the Lord Venkateswara
temple.
Anil, who trekked his way up the
10-km distance from Tirupati, spent some time at the Sri Krishna Guest
House of RIL before heading to the temple for performing rituals. Anils
wife, Tina, joined him after travelling to Tirumala by road.
Anil,
whose group scrapped a non-compete agreement with the Mukesh Ambani-led
RIL last week, agreement.
The two sides had also announced last
week that they would expeditiously negotiate a gas supply agreement on
the lines of the May 7 Supreme Court order. MSN News.
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