Ramulamma hobbles out of her thatch hut
to pay a final, tearful farewell to her rickshaw driver husband, yet another victim of the heat wave that has already killed
1,065 people in the southern Indian state of Andhra Pradesh.
The 45-year-old widow wants to join her
husband's funeral procession in Nalgonda, a town about 100 kilometers (63 miles) southeast of Andhra Pradesh state capital
Hyderabad, but every step is an ordeal.
Ramulamma has been fighting a 15-year-old
losing battle with disease brought on by long-term fluoride poisoning.
Ramulamma's husband, Berha Venkullu Venkaiyah,
ferried rice in his rickshaw from the local mill to the village shop for a fee of 30 rupees (80 US cents) a day to support
his disabled wife and their 15 year-old son.
Last week, with temperatures hovering close to 48 degrees Celsius, almost seven
degrees above normal, the five-kilometer (three-mile) journey proved fatal for 55-year old Venkaiyah.
"He came home and fell unconscious so we borrowed some money from the neighbours
and rushed him to hospital. The doctors said it was a sunstroke and tried to inject saline into him but it was no use," Ramulamma told AFP.
A majority of sunstroke victims such as Venkaiyah had been daily wage earners
with no savings or assets. Despite the mercury soaring to record temperatures this summer they've had no option but to continue
doing strenuous menial jobs to support their families.
"The government puts out warnings saying don't go out, but what choice do we
have? If we don't go out and work we don't eat," Biksham, a 24-year old barber in Nalgonda's Gundrepally village told AFP....
"We have never seen a summer like this. Every summer has a period of excessive
heat but nobody remembers it ever lasting this long," T. Venkateshwarlu, a local administrative official told AFP.
This summer there have already been a dozen sunstroke deaths in Chandur --
a cluster of 17 villages administered by Venkateshwarlu.
The villages get power supply for 17 to 18 hours a day but most of the villagers
are left to the mercy of nature as they cannot afford any cooling.
"In most of our villages only about five percent of the houses have a simple
electric fan," says Venkateshwarlu.
Chandur lies in the heart of Nalgonda district, which has accounted for almost
200 of the 1,065 sunstroke deaths reported in Andhra Pradesh this summer.
State officials claim the casualties have been unprecedented this year because
the extended heat wave has been made worse by the fact that the state is facing its second successive drought.
"The drought means there has been little work in the fields this year so people
are hungry and desperate for any work they can find," says Ventakeshwarlu.