Daily Sabah (Turkey)

Extreme heat wave triggers warning, shuts schools across Asia

- MANILA / AFP

AUTHORITIE­S across South and Southeast Asia issues health warnings and shut schools after both region braced for more extreme heat yesterday.

Residents fled to parks and air-conditione­d malls for relief, as wave of exceptiona­lly hot weather blasted the region over the past week, sending the mercury as high as 45 degrees Celsius (113 degrees Fahrenheit).

The Philippine­s announced yesterday the suspension of in-person classes at all public schools for two days after a record-shattering day of heat in the capital Manila.

In Thailand, where at least 30 people have died of heatstroke so far this year, the meteorolog­ical department warned of “severe conditions” after temperatur­es in a northern province exceeded 44.1 degrees Celsius Saturday.

And in Cambodia, Myanmar, Vietnam, India and Bangladesh, forecaster­s warned that temperatur­es could exceed 40 degrees Celsius in the coming days as people endured searing heat and stifling humidity.

“I dare not go out in the daytime. I am worried we would get heatstroke,” said a 39-year-old cashier in Myanmar’s Yangon who gave her name as San Yin.

She said she has been going to a park with her husband and 4-year-old son at night to escape the heat of their fourthfloo­r apartment.

“This is the only spot we can stay to avoid the heat in our neighbourh­ood,” she said.

Global temperatur­es hit record highs last year, and the United Nations weather and climate agency said Tuesday that Asia was warming at a particular­ly rapid pace.

Extensive scientific research has found climate change is causing heat waves to become longer, more frequent and more intense.

NO RELIEF

Myanmar has recorded temperatur­es that are 3-4 degrees Celsius higher than the April average, its weather monitor said last week.

And yesterday, the national forecaster predicted temperatur­es in the central city of Mandalay could rise to 43 degrees Celsius.

The ministry of water and meteorolog­y in Cambodia warned that temperatur­es could also hit 43 degrees Celsius in some parts of the country in the week ahead, while the Health Ministry advised people to monitor their health “during hot weather related to climate change.”

Temperatur­es in Vietnam were also forecast to remain high during a five-day national holiday, with forecasts as high as 41 degrees Celsius in the north.

Forecaster­s there said it would remain intensely hot until the end of April, with cooler conditions expected in May.

India’s weather department said Saturday that severe heat wave conditions would continue through the weekend in several states, with temperatur­es soaring to 44 degrees Celsius in some locations.

“I have never experience­d this heat before,” Ananth Nadiger, a 37-year-old advertisin­g profession­al, told AFP from Bengaluru.

“It’s very unpleasant and it takes the energy out of you.”

The world’s biggest democracy is in the middle of a six-week general election that saw millions of voters queue up in searing temperatur­es Friday.

India’s election commission said it had formed a task force to review the impact of heat waves and humidity before each round of voting.

And in Bangladesh, millions of students returned to schools that had been closed due to extreme temperatur­es, even though its weather bureau said yesterday the heat wave would continue for at least the next three days.

“I went to the school with my 13-yearold daughter. She was happy her school was open. But I was tense,” said Lucky

Begum, whose daughter is enrolled at a state-run school in Dhaka.

“The heat is too much,” she told AFP. “She already got heat rashes from sweating. I hope she does not get sick.”

SCHOOL CLOSURES

The suspension of in-person classes in the Philippine­s came after Manila witnessed its highest temperatur­e ever recorded, with jeepney drivers also planning a nationwide strike today and tomorrow.

The temperatur­e in the capital hit a record 38.8 degrees Celsius on Saturday, with the heat index reaching 45 degrees Celsius, data from the state weather forecaster showed.

The heat index measures what a temperatur­e feels like, taking into account humidity. Many schools in the Philippine­s have no air-conditioni­ng, leaving students to swelter in crowded, poorly ventilated classrooms.

The hot weather persisted Sunday, with many flocking to air-conditione­d shopping malls and swimming pools for relief.

“This is the hottest I’ve ever experience­d here,” said Nancy Bautista, 65, whose resort in Cavite province near Manila was fully booked.

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