People rush a patient to a hospital suffering from heatstroke in
Karachi, Pakistan, on Tuesday.
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Pakistan's financial capital of Karachi is wilting in a
four-day heat wave that has killed more than 780 people, a health charity said
on Wednesday, as the government declared a holiday in the city to encourage
people to stay home and cool off.
Reuters reports the heat
wave has coincided with severe electricity cuts and the holy month of Ramadan,
when most Muslims do not eat or drink during daylight hours. Many of the
deaths, among the elderly and poor in the southern city, were caused by
dehydration.
The report continues:
"The heat wave death
toll has reached close to the 800 mark in the last four days," Anwar
Kazmi, a senior official of the private charity, the Edhi Foundation, told
Reuters.
"We are planning to
expand the Edhi morgue to cope with a situation like this in future."
The charity runs a
network of ambulances, clinics and morgues to bridge the gaps in an
overburdened and poorly funded public health system in the city of 20 million
people, home to Pakistan's main stock market, central bank and biggest port.
Government health
officials did not return calls seeking comment.
Many of Karachi's wealthy
have generators to run air conditioners or are gathering in upscale,
air-conditioned malls to beat the heat, which reached 44 degrees Celsius (111
Fahrenheit) over the weekend.
A sea breeze slightly
cooled parts of the city on Wednesday but rains predicted by weather officials
did not arrive.
Many residents are
furious with the civilian government over the electricity cuts and the poor
state of the public hospitals treating many of those who have fainted from the
heat.
Public services in
Pakistan, a nuclear-armed nation of 190 million people, are starved of
resources because almost all its wealthy evade taxes. Fewer than 0.5 percent of
citizens pay income tax; many legislators are among the tax dodgers.
The military, which
receives the lion's share of the budget, has set up 22 health centres, where it
also hands out water and rehydration salts.
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