Daytime cooking ban in India as heatwave claims 300 lives
Authorities try to prevent accidental fires amid scorching temperatures that have destroyed crops and killed livestock
An Indian girl carries drinking water in a plastic container near Jammu, India. Millions don’t have enough water amid a weeks-long drought. Photograph: Channi Anand/AP
source:theguardian
An Indian girl carries drinking water in a plastic container near Jammu, India. Millions don’t have enough water amid a weeks-long drought. Photograph: Channi Anand/AP
With sizzling temperatures claiming more than 300 lives this month in India,
officials have banned daytime cooking in some parts of the
drought-stricken country in a bid to prevent accidental fires that have
killed nearly 80 more people.
The eastern state of Bihar this week took the unprecedented step of
forbidding any cooking between 9am and 6pm, after accidental fires
exacerbated by dry, hot and windy weather swept through shantytowns and
thatched-roof houses in villages and killed 79 people. They included 10
children and five adults killed in a fire sparked during a Hindu prayer
ceremony in Bihar’s Aurangabad district last week.
People were instead told to cook to night.
Hoping to prevent more fires, officials have also banned the burning
of spent crops and religious fire rituals. Anyone defying the ban risks
up to a year in jail.
“We call this the fire season in Bihar,” Vyas, a state disaster
management official who goes by one name, said. “Strong, westerly winds
stoke fires which spread easily and cause great damage.”
Much of India is reeling under a weeks-long heat wave and severe
drought conditions that have decimated crops, killed livestock and left
at least 330 million Indians without enough water for their daily needs.
Rivers, lakes and dams have dried up in parts of the western states
of Maharashtra and Gujarat, and overall officials say that groundwater
reservoirs are at just 22 percent capacity.
In some areas, the situation is so bad the government has sent
tankers of water for emergency relief. Monsoon rains are still weeks
away, expected to start only in June.
At
least 300 people have died of heat-related illness this month,
including 110 in the state of Orissa, 137 in Telangana and another 45 in
Andhra Pradesh where temperatures since the start of April have been
hovering around 44C.
That’s about 4-5C hotter than normal for April, according to state
meteorological official YK Reddy. He predicted the situation would only
get worse in May, traditionally the hottest month in India.
The southern state of Andhra Pradesh is running ads on TV and in
newspapers urging people to stay indoors during the hottest hours.
Construction and farm laborers are advised to seek shade when the sun is
directly overhead.
Huge numbers of farmers, meanwhile, have migrated to nearby cities
and towns in search of manual labor, often leaving elderly and young
relatives behind in parched villages.
This is the second consecutive year southern India has suffered from a deadly heat wave, after some 2,500 people died in scorching temperatures last year.
Though heat waves are common during Indian summers, authorities have
done little to ensure water security or prepare urban populations for
the risks.
This year, Orissa’s capital of Bhubaneshwar and Maharashtra’s city of
Nagpur joined Gujarat’s Ahmedabad in launching a heat wave program to
educate people on how to stay cool, provide shelters and train medical
workers on dealing with heat-related illnesses like sun stroke and
dehydration. But most cities and states lack such programs.
This
week, more than 150 leading Indian economists, rights activists and
academics expressed their “collective anxiety about the enormous
suffering of the rural poor” in an open letter to prime minister
Narendra Modi.
The letter says the official response to the crisis has been “sadly
listless, lacking in both urgency and compassion,” and urges Modi to
restore funding for a government program guaranteeing 100 days of paid
work a year for the poor and unemployed.
While the monsoon is not expected until June, weather experts hope there would be brief spells of light rain sooner.
“The effect would last a few days, before temperatures start rising
again,” Indian meteorological department spokesman BP Yadav said.
source:theguardian
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Daytime cooking ban in India as heatwave claims 300 lives
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