Thousands of people enraged by power cuts during an extreme heat wave have been rioting across northern India, setting electricity substations on fire and taking power company officials hostage, Indian officials said yesterday.
The impoverished state of Uttar Pradesh has never had enough power for its 200 million people — about the population of Brazil — and many receive only a few hours of power a day under normal conditions, while 63 percent of homes have no electricity at all.
Yet recent temperatures that soared to 47?C have caused power demand to spike at 11,000 megawatts (MW) — far higher than the state’s 8,000MW capacity — triggering blackouts that shut down fans, city water pumps and air conditioners.
Thousands of people stormed an electricity substation on Friday near the state capital of Lucknow, ransacking offices and taking several workers hostage for 18 hours until police intervened yesterday morning, state utility official Narendra Nath Mullick said.
Elsewhere, an angry crowd set fire to an electricity substation in Gonda, 180km southeast of Lucknow.
It took three hours for firefighters to put out the flames on Friday.
Another substation was also set on fire in Gorakhpur, 320km southeast of Lucknow.
Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Akilesh Yadav said officials were trying to purchase power from other states, though they were also facing shortages amid the extreme heat.
Residents are particularly angry about the power cuts after receiving reliable supplies through the Indian elections that ended on May 16.
Since then, only some regions have been guaranteed unbroken power supplies, while others have received little to none.
The Indian High Court in the city of Allahabad is now hearing a petition alleging discrimination in power distribution, and has asked the government to explain why some regions allegedly were receiving preferential treatment.
Those regions include the city of Varanasi, the parliamentary constituency of new Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, as well as constituencies held by Yadav and other top officials in the state’s ruling party.
Meteorological officials said temperatures were likely to remain high through at least Tuesday in Uttar Pradesh, Gujarat, Delhi and other north Indian areas.
“People are advised not to venture out of their homes,” Lucknow-based weather official J.P. Gupta said.
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