Cold wave continues to disrupt life in northern India - Action News
Home WebMail Thursday, November 14, 2024, 02:44 AM | Calgary | 6.0°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
World

Cold wave continues to disrupt life in northern India

People across northern India battled icy winds as an ongoing cold wave tightened its grip over the region on Saturday.

Weather poses danger to homeless in cities including New Delhi, Shimla

Homeless men wrapped in blankets wait for donors to purchase food for them from a stall on a cold morning in New Delhi. A cold wave is sweeping across South Asia, with many regions seeing the first snows of the winter season. (Dominique Faget/AFP/Getty Images)

People across northern India battled icy winds as anongoing cold wave tightened its grip over the region on Saturday.

Intense cold conditions continued to prevail in the national capital New Delhi though the minimum temperature increased slightly to 4.3 Con Friday, three degrees below the season's average.

Temperatures in northern parts of the Indian subcontinent, skirting the Himalayan foothills, dip drastically during the months of December and January, mostly due to seasonal western disturbances.

Train services in New Delhi continued to remain disrupted, with 25 of them delayed, sixrescheduled and eightcancelled due to fog or other operational reasons.

People were seen huddling around bonfires in a bid to warm themselves.

The freeze is especially harsh for the poor, many of whom are forced to sleep outside braving the cold.

"We live on a footpath. I am feeling really very cold and I am keeping warm by lighting bonfire,"said Rakesh Kumar Gupta, a homeless, in New Delhi.

Meanwhile, cold wave conditions intensified in Shimla in India's northern Himachal Pradesh province.

Residents lit bonfires and wrapped themselves in multiple layers of clothing as the city witnessed snowfall and reeled under teeth-chattering cold.

"The temperature is really very low, hence we are facing difficulties,"said Diksha, a Shimla resident. "We are somehow managing by lighting a bonfire,"she added.

Large swathes of northern and central India have seen a sudden dip in temperatures, a direct impact of snowfall in the higher reaches of the Himalayas.

South Asia's winters are not as cold as other regions such as North America, but the millions of poor here are hit harder because they live in the open and do not have enough warm clothes.