india water irpt
'Water camps' spring up to battle Indian heat wave
02:26 - Source: CNN

Affected by the heat in India? Send us your experiences.

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Official in Telangana state: Deaths could have been avoided with a "little more care"

Most of the deaths from the heat wave have been in state of Andhra Pradesh

Water is in high demand as people try to remain hydrated and cool

Hyderabad, India CNN  — 

Amruta Bai works at one such stall, and has been constantly refilling plastic cups with water that’s free for anyone to drink.

The water is free for anyone who needs a drink during a deadly heat wave that’s killed more than 1,424 people in the past few days.

Most of the deaths – 1,020 – have been in the southeastern state of Andhra Pradesh, though another 340 have died in nearby Telangana, where Hyderabad is the capital.

People stop by Bai’s stall every two minutes as the temperature slowly rises toward its peak, typically in mid- to late afternoon.

On Wednesday, temperatures in Hyderabad were forecast to hit a high of almost 43 degrees Celsius, or around 110 degrees Fahrenheit. Nights, while cooler, hover around a sticky 30 C or 86 F. During the day, humidity is around 30%.

Ice cream seller Bharat says evenings and early mornings are the best for business. He’s selling twice as much ice cream compared with last year. But afternoons are typically quiet. It’s too hot for most people to come onto the streets.

And that’s where the true cost of this heat wave has been felt.

An Indian man wipes sweat off his face on a hot summer day in New Delhi, India, Sunday, May 24, 2015. Heat wave has tightened its grip over most parts of the country. More than 200 people have died since mid-April in a heat wave sweeping two southeast Indian states, Andhra Pradesh and Telangana, officials said Saturday. (AP Photo/Tsering Topgyal)
Extreme heat kills over 1,300 in India
01:05 - Source: CNN

The poor and ill affected most

Millions of people in India are homeless. The streets are where they live with only rudimentary shelter. Air conditioning or even fans are a distant dream.

Many of those who succumbed to the heat were too poor, frail or ill to cope. The chief secretary of Telangana said many of the deaths in that state could have been avoided if victims had taken “a little more care.”

However, the chief secretary of Telangana said many of the deaths in that state could have been avoided if victims had taken “a little more care.”

Asked to explain his comments, B.R. Meena said: “Cover properly, have light color clothes, take umbrella, take care, be in cool area – had they taken such care, this could have been avoided.”

He said people were being urged to use an umbrella, hat or turban, and drink plenty of water and avoid going outside between 11 a.m. and 4 p.m.

India recorded its highest maximum temperature of 47.6 C – 117 F – at Titlagarh in Odisha on Monday, according to the country’s main weather office.

In many places in the country’s north, central and eastern plains, temperatures are about two to five degrees higher than average.

Westerly winds blowing in from Pakistan’s Sindh province was making already hot conditions worse, said B.P. Yadav, director of the India Meteorological Department.

Relief is expected to come in the form of monsoon rains later in the week, though the country’s weather agency said another hot spell was likely to follow.

CNN’s Mallika Kapur reported from Hyderabad, and Hilary Whiteman wrote from Hong Kong. CNN’s Harmeet Shah Singh, Sugam Pokharel and Rishabh Pratap also contributed to this report.

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