Heat Wave Kills 11 People In South Africa

South Africa authorities said on Sunday in Cape Town that 11 people have died of heat stroke, with a loss 269 million dollars due to severe drought in the country.

 

The health department said all the deaths were reported in North West Province.

 

The department’s spokesperson, Tebogo Lekgethwane, said the deceased were aged between 22 and 58 years.

 

He said some people suffering from heat stroke have been admitted to hospital.

 

“The Mahikeng Provincial Hospital alone accepted 16 people over the past three days.

 

Lekgethwane said as persistent heat wave continued unabated, the North West Province has been declared a drought area under the Disaster Management Act.

 

He said a drought response task team consisting of government, organised agriculture and all municipalities in the province, has been established.

 

“More than 19, 000 applications for financial assistance from commercial and subsistence farmers have been received.

 

The heat wave has worsened dry conditions not only in the province but also in Free State and Limpopo, all maize producing regions’’, he said.

 

Lekgethwane said the dry conditions are believed to be caused by cyclones in the Indian Ocean which absorbed the moisture from the sub continent’s interior.

 

“Crop farmers in the North West have suffered an estimated loss of 269 million dollars due to severe drought.

 

Lekgethwane said South African farmers are doubtful if there would be harvest due to recent dry conditions affecting most parts of the country.

 

 

(Xinhua/NAN)

Heat Wave Kills Over 120 In Pakistan

Pakistan’s largest charity, Edhi Welfare Organization has said that its mortuary has been filled to capacity as a result of heatwave-related deaths. Heat wave in Pakistan’s largest city Karachi and nearby districts of Southern Sindh province has killed at least 120 people, Pakistan’s health officials have said.

The southern port city of Karachi saw temperatures reach as high as 45 degrees Celsius on Saturday, just short of an all-time high of 47C in June 1979. Dr Seemin Jamali, the head of the emergency department confirmed more than 100 people had died at the hospital. “They all died of heat stroke,” she said.

Pakistan’s Meteorological Department said temperatures would likely subside in the coming days, but doctors have advised avoiding exposure to the sun and wearing light cotton clothes.

Electricity cuts in turn crippled their water supply system, hampering the pumping of millions of gallons of water to consumers,  Their Prime Minister, Nawaz Sharif has  however warned electric supply companies that he would not tolerate power outages especially doing this period of Ramadan.