Heat wave to resume till
Wednesday in Karachi: Met experts
|
An intense heat wave killed more than 120 people over the
weekend in Pakistan's southern city of Karachi, officials said on Monday, as
the electricity grid crashed during the first days of the Muslim holy month of
Ramadan.
The outages hit large
portions of Pakistan's financial heart and home to 20 million people, where
residents lit bonfires in protest.
"Hundreds of
patients suffering from the heat wave are being treated at government
hospitals," Saeed Mangnejo, health secretary for the province of Sindh,
told Reuters.
Temperature soared to 44
degrees Celsius (111 Fahrenheit) on Saturday and hovered at 43 degrees Celsius
(109 Fahrenheit) on Sunday, coinciding with a surge of demand for power as
families observed Ramadan, when Muslims fast during daylight hours.
Both the federal
government and K-Electric, the private company that supplies Karachi with
power, had promised there would be no outages during the time when families
gathered to break their fast at sunset.
Officials from K-Electric
were not immediately available for comment on the scale or cause of the
outages, which left many families without water, air-conditioning, fans and
light.
One of the Karachi's
biggest hospitals, the Jinnah Postgraduate Medical Centre, reported 85 deaths
from heat stroke and dehydration.
Thirty-five patients died
from heat stroke in other hospitals, doctors said. Two more died from
heat-related complications, Mangnejo said.
Corruption and
mismanagement mean Pakistan usually suffers eight hours of daily power cuts
even in its wealthy urban areas. Those in poorer areas are hit even harder.
The cash-strapped
government sells power for less than the cost of production, but its late
payments to suppliers cause a chronic shortage.
Many wealthy or influential
families and factory owners exacerbate the problem by refusing to pay their
bills or cutting deals with corrupt power officials.
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