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Rajasthan emergency measures: temperatures records high 51 degrees Celsius

NEW DELHI: Authorities across Rajasthan sprinkled water in the streets and awaited the arrival of a special water train on Saturday, a day after temperatures reached a record-high 51 degrees Celsius.

Several hospitals in the desert state, which has been hit worst by a heat wave that has spread to many parts of India, have set aside beds to treat heatstroke victims. Television video on Saturday showed heatstroke patients being wheeled in on stretchers, with paramedics covering them with ice packs and pouring water on them.

Municipal workers sprinkled water in residential areas of the city of Bikaner and a train filled with 2.5 million liters (660,000 gallons) of water headed towards the town of Bhilwara.

Reports of 16 deaths in Rajasthan, where nearly 17,000 villages in 19 of 33 districts were facing water shortages, have emerged.

The India Meteorological Department said that maximum temperatures will likely fall by 2-3 degrees Celsius in Rajasthan next week. But no significant change is expected in northern India.

The blistering heat also is sweeping across large parts of the northern state of Uttar Pradesh, with six deaths reported there in the past month.

On Thursday, the city of Philodi in Rajasthan suffered through the country’s highest recorded temperature – 51C. India’s meteorological department said the previous high was 50.6C, reached in 1956 in the city of Alwar.

Heatstroke has claimed 109 lives in Andhra Pradesh as well, where pre-monsoon showers have broken the hot spell, a state government statement said.

The intense heat wave in Gujarat has claimed 17 lives this month, with temperatures touching 48C.

Officials have shut schools in several states, including Rajasthan, New Delhi, Uttar Pradesh and Gujarat, to protect children from the heat wave.

Authorities have issued a list of precautions, urging people to stay indoors, shun unnecessary travel in the sun, increase intake of water and seek medical attention if they feel the symptoms of heatstroke.

Authorities issued a severe heat wave alert for the weekend in Gujarat, Rajasthan and parts of Madhya Pradesh. That means the areas can expect temperatures of at least 47C.

The monsoon normally hits southern India in the first week of June and covers the rest of the nation within a month. It is especially eagerly awaited this year because several parts of the country are reeling under a drought brought on by two years of weak rains.

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Source:Timesofindia