Despite hopes
that weekend thundershowers would help end a raging heat wave in southern
India, the rain brought only limited relief as the death toll since mid-April
approached 2,200.
Officials said Sunday that the intense heat was likely
to continue for another day in worst-hit Andhra Pradesh and Telangana states.
Daytime temperatures hovered between 45 and 47 degrees
Celsius (113-116 Fahrenheit) in some parts of the two states over the weekend,
3 to 7 degrees Celsius (5 to 12 degrees Fahrenheit) above normal, said K.Y.
Reddy, a director of the Meteorological Centre in the Telangana state capital
of Hyderabad. Thundershowers brought relief to people in other areas.
AP report continues:
Andhra Pradesh has been hit the hardest, with 1,636
people dying in the state from the heat over the past month and a half, a
government statement said. Another 561 people have died in neighboring
Telangana, said Sada Bhargavi, a state disaster management commissioner.
Meanwhile, 22 heat-related deaths have been reported
in northern Uttar Pradesh state over the past two weeks, said Raj Shekhar, a
state government official.
The Press Trust of India news agency said 21 people
have died from the heat in eastern Orissa state, seven in western Gujarat state
and two in New Delhi, India's capital.
"We can't bear this heat. The situation is
worsened by frequent power outages," said Rekha Tiwari, a housewife in
Lucknow, the Uttar Pradesh state capital.
Mohammed Waseem, a cart puller who was drenched in
sweat, had no respite as he went about delivering goods in New Delhi, where
temperatures hovered at around 41 C (106 F) on Sunday after a brief morning shower.
"I have to work to feed myself," he said.
Cooling monsoon rains are expected this week in
southern India before gradually advancing north. The monsoon season will last
until the end of September.
Forecasting
service AccuWeather warned last week of prolonged drought conditions in India,
with the monsoon likely to be disrupted by a more active typhoon season over
the Pacific.
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