A heat wave has killed almost 450 people in Pakistan’s south over the
past three days, with paramilitary forces beginning to set up emergency
medical camps in the streets, health officials have said.
Aljazeera was there:
Most of the deaths have been in the southern port city of
Karachi where temperatures in the surrounding Sindh province reached up
to 45C on Saturday. Hospitals have been swamped with people suffering
from heatstroke and dehydration, while repeated power outages have left
many without air conditioning or running water.
The electricity grid, run by a private company, K-electric, has been
overwhelmed as people switch on fans and air conditioners, and as
families begin to cook at the same time during the month of Ramadan.
Electricity cuts in turn crippled Karachi’s water supply system,
hampering the pumping of millions of litres of water to consumers, the
state-run water utility said.
Al Jazeera’s Kamal Hyder, reporting from Islamabad, said the official
death toll had risen sharply to 445 by Tuesday, as many of those who
died were already in a critical condition when they were admitted to
Karachi hospitals in previous days. “Most of these people are very poor
because there are a lot of people who are living on the streets, the
victims are elderly,” he said.
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