At least 15 dead in eastern India over 24 hours as temperatures soar
BHUBANESWAR, India — At least 15 people have died of suspected heatstroke in India's eastern states of Bihar and Odisha on May 30, authorities said, with the region gripped in a debilitating heatwave expected to continue until June 1.
India has been experiencing a blisteringly hot summer and a part of capital Delhi recorded the country's highest ever temperature at 52.9 deg Celsius this week, though that may be revised with the weather department checking the sensors of the weather station that registered the reading.
While temperatures in north-western and central India are expected to fall in the coming days, the prevailing heatwave over east India is likely to continue for two days, said the India Meteorological Department (IMD), which declares a heatwave when the temperature is 4.5 deg C to 6.4 deg C higher than normal.
The deaths of 10 people were reported in the government hospital in Odisha's Rourkela region on May 30, authorities told Reuters, while five deaths were reported in Bihar's Aurangabad city due to "sunstroke".
"About seven more people died on their way to the hospital yesterday but the exact cause of their death will be known after the autopsy," Aurangabad District Collector Shrikant Shastree told Reuters.
The Odisha government has prohibited outdoor activities for its employees between 11am and 3pm when temperatures peak.
Three people died of suspected heatstroke in Jharkhand state, neighbouring Bihar, local media reported.
In Delhi, where high temperatures have been causing birds and wild monkeys to faint or fall sick, the city zoo is relying on pools and sprinklers to bring relief to its 1,200 occupants.
"We have shifted to summer management diet, which includes a more liquid diet as well as all the