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Japan on alert against scorching temperatures after 4 die of heatstroke

Japan on alert against scorching temperatures after 4 die of heatstroke

At least four people have died of heatstroke and the
Japan Meteorological Agency has warned people to take precautions against an early heatwave that has enveloped the nation.
The sudden spike in temperatures began on Tuesday, with Kofu reporting a high of 38.2 degrees Celsius (100.7 degrees Fahrenheit), more than 10 degrees above average for the middle of June, which is typically the rainy season in Japan. Temperatures of 37.7 degrees were reported in Gunma prefecture and 37.6 degrees in Shizuoka.
Tokyo recorded a high of 34.8 degrees and Osaka was at 33.4 degrees, according to the agency, with 547 locations across the country reporting temperatures past 30 degrees.
The four people who died of heatstroke were all elderly and included a woman aged 96 who was found collapsed in a field in Gunma and later pronounced dead. Doctors in Tokyo treated 169 people for symptoms of heatstroke on Tuesday and a further 57 on Wednesday, Agence France-Presse reported.
The above-average temperatures are expected to continue until the weekend.
People walk down a street in the Yurakucho district in Tokyo, where temperatures topped 34 degrees Celsius on Wednesday. Photo: AFP
'The current heat is clearly unusual,' said Yukiko Imada, a professor at the University of Tokyo's department of Climate System Research.

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Japan on alert against scorching temperatures after 4 die of heatstroke
Japan on alert against scorching temperatures after 4 die of heatstroke

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Japan on alert against scorching temperatures after 4 die of heatstroke

At least four people have died of heatstroke and the Japan Meteorological Agency has warned people to take precautions against an early heatwave that has enveloped the nation. The sudden spike in temperatures began on Tuesday, with Kofu reporting a high of 38.2 degrees Celsius (100.7 degrees Fahrenheit), more than 10 degrees above average for the middle of June, which is typically the rainy season in Japan. Temperatures of 37.7 degrees were reported in Gunma prefecture and 37.6 degrees in Shizuoka. Tokyo recorded a high of 34.8 degrees and Osaka was at 33.4 degrees, according to the agency, with 547 locations across the country reporting temperatures past 30 degrees. The four people who died of heatstroke were all elderly and included a woman aged 96 who was found collapsed in a field in Gunma and later pronounced dead. Doctors in Tokyo treated 169 people for symptoms of heatstroke on Tuesday and a further 57 on Wednesday, Agence France-Presse reported. The above-average temperatures are expected to continue until the weekend. People walk down a street in the Yurakucho district in Tokyo, where temperatures topped 34 degrees Celsius on Wednesday. Photo: AFP 'The current heat is clearly unusual,' said Yukiko Imada, a professor at the University of Tokyo's department of Climate System Research.

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A blistering heat wave is sweeping across northern India, with temperatures soaring above the normal, disrupting daily life and raising health concerns. The mercury shot up to 47.3 degrees Celsius (117 degrees Fahrenheit) in Sri Ganganagar, a desert city in the northwestern state of Rajasthan on Monday, according to the Indian Meteorological Department. The record for the country is 51 degrees, set in May 2016 in Rajasthan's city of Phalodi. The searing heat is not just a seasonal discomfort but underscores a growing challenge for the country's overwhelmed health infrastructure. A prolonged exposure to extreme temperatures often causes heat strokes, mainly impacting the poor, outdoor workers, children, and the elderly. Last year, a monthslong heatwave across swathes of India killed more than 100 people and led to more than 40,000 suspected cases of heat stroke, according to data from the health ministry. The Indian capital, New Delhi, saw its first heatwave of the season, with temperatures soaring past 45 degrees in one of its neighbourhoods on Monday. The swelter wasn't just numerical as the real-feel temperature, the heat index factoring in relative humidity, was a couple of notches higher.

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