The Peterborough Examiner

Heat wave kills more than 500 in India

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NEW DELHI — Soaring temperatur­es have gripped parts of southern and northern India in an extreme heat wave which has killed more than 500 people and looks set to continue this week, officials said on Monday.

The hottest place in India was Allahabad, a city in the northern state of Uttar Pradesh, which saw mercury rise to 47.7 degrees Celsius on Sunday, while the capital Delhi recorded a high of 43.5 C.

Most of the 539 recorded deaths have been of constructi­on workers, the elderly or the homeless in the southern states of Andhra Pradesh and Telangana, said officials, but some deaths have also occurred in Uttar Pradesh, Odisha and West Bengal.

The Indian Meteorolog­ical Department has issued a red warning to affected regions saying that the heat wave conditions are likely to continue over coming days.

Director of Andhra Pradesh’s Disaster Management Department

K. Dhananjaya Reddy said 325 people had died of sunstroke or dehydratio­n in the state in the last three days.

“We are advising people not to go to work between 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.,” said Reddy. “We have also opened centres in different places specially in urban areas for the distributi­on of water and butter milk.”

The government has cancelled the leave of all doctors as hospitals were being flooded with cases of heat-stroke, he said, adding that compensati­on of $1,575 will be given to families of people who had died.

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