Stifling heat has killed more than 1,100 people in India in less than one week.
The worst-hit area is the southeastern
state of Andhra Pradesh, where authorities say 852 people have died in
the heat wave. Another 266 have died in the neighboring state of
Telangana.
India recorded its highest maximum
temperature of 47 degrees Celsius — 117 degrees Fahrenheit — at Angul in
the state of Odisha on Monday, according to B.P. Yadav, director of the
India Meteorological Department.
Hot, dry conditions are being made worse
by winds blowing in from Pakistan’s Sindh province across the northern
and central plains of India. “This extreme, dry heat is being blown into
India by westerly winds,” Yadav said.
The high temperatures are expected to
continue for another two days before any respite, the meteorological
department warned Tuesday. However, the agency said that another hot
spell would likely soon follow.
Among the worst-hit states are Andhra
Pradesh and Telangana. The capital of New Delhi, neighboring Haryana
state, the largely desert state of Rajasthan and several central and
eastern regions are also bearing the brunt of intense summer, Yadav
said.
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