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Scientists in South Asia struggle to understand heatwave

that's all you can do. you can't control nature. nature going to do what nature going do. we can only make things worse.

Nature has been doing whatever it wants for billions of years, before man, and will likely being be doing it long after too. We can only try to make things works for us as a species as best as we can, that is all, and let Nature do whatever it will, which it will anyway, mankind or no mankind.
 
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but they are becoming more and more common around the world.

The frequency of such "strange" occurrences will increase with more deadly outcomes ... its about time that the impacted Countries should start investing in research on finding the solutions to first deciphering and then countering these anomalies before its too late.
 
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Majority of Karachi heatwave victims were homeless: minister
By AFP
Published: June 29, 2015
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PHOTO: AFP

KARACHI: Nearly two-thirds of the victims of a killer heatwave that swept lower Sindh last week were homeless people, a minister said on Monday, as the death toll in Karachi reached over 1,200.

The city of 20 million inhabitants is a sprawling metropolis with few green areas and has scant facilities for coping with intensely hot weather.

Those living on the city’s streets have little access to shelter or safe drinking water, making them particularly vulnerable to the scorching temperatures.

“About 60 to 65% of the heatstroke victims were beggars and heroin addicts, street people,” Jam Mehtab Dahar, the provincial health minister told AFP.

Read: Karachi heatwave death toll crosses 1,200: Health Department

Zafar Ejaz, a senior health official, said the death toll as of Monday stood at 1,229 across the city’s hospitals.

After peaking at around 45 degrees Celsius on the weekend of June 20 and June 21, the heat subsided to the mid-30s later in the week as the city’s customary cooling sea breeze returned.

Among the remaining 35 to 40% of deaths, elderly women who died in their homes comprised a majority, Dahar said, suggesting power cuts had played a role as people had been unable to use fans or air conditioners.

Read: No mercy: After morgues, city runs out of funeral vans

“The women were at homes and not directly exposed to heat unlike the street people,” Dahar added.

This year’s heatwave has also coincided with the start of the holy month of Ramazan, during which millions of devout Muslims abstain from food and drink from sunrise to sunset.

Under Pakistani law, it is illegal for Muslims to eat or drink in public during daylight hours in Ramadan, though the crisis prompted some clerics to advise people they should stop fasting if their health is at risk.
 
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Under Pakistani law, it is illegal for Muslims to eat or drink in public during daylight hours in Ramadan

Thank you General Zia ul Haq. Your gifts to the nation just keep on giving!
 
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Science! What science? Sky gods are not happy explanation should suffice as it had in the past.
 
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