Over 100,000 schools in Pakistan remain closed due to the heat

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epa11438987 People cover their heads in wet towels during a heatwave in Karachi, Pakistan, 26 June 2024. The heatwave in Karachi has led to the hospitalization of 1,592 individuals at Jinnah Hospital within the past 24 hours, resulting in 49 fatalities, including 29 brought in dead, according to doctors. The city, currently experiencing extreme heat due to the suspension of sea breeze, witnessed its hottest day of 2024 on 24 June, with temperatures soaring to a record 42 degree Celsius. Residents are advised to avoid sun exposure between 10am and 4pm.  EPA-EFE/SHAHZAIB AKBER

Pakistan struggled through a series of heatwaves in May and June, with temperatures peaking at more than 50 deg C in parts of rural Sindh.

PHOTO: EPA-EFE

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School summer holidays will be extended by two weeks in southern Pakistan because of high temperatures affecting more than 100,000 schools, an education official said on July 23.

Pakistan is

increasingly vulnerable to extreme weather conditions

resulting from climate change, including heatwaves that are hotter and more frequent and monsoons that are heavier and longer.

“We decided to close schools for an additional 14 days for the children’s well-being,” Mr Atif Vighio, a spokesman at the education department in Sindh province, told AFP.

Planned power cuts, also known as load-shedding, happen frequently in Pakistan due to an ongoing power supply crisis.

The load-shedding varies from city to city, but in rural areas of Sindh they can last for more than 12 hours a day, leaving schools without fans.

“As a teacher, I am worried about how I will complete the curriculum, but as a mother, I am concerned about kids going to school in this heat,” a public school teacher told AFP, requesting for her name not to be used.

“It is the load-shedding we are worried about, not just the heat.”

The government has said more than 26 million children are out of school due to poverty.

Pakistan struggled through a series of heatwaves in May and June, with temperatures peaking at more than 50 deg C in parts of rural Sindh.

The authorities in Punjab province, the country’s most populous, started summer vacations in May one week early to protect children from the searing heat.

The UN children’s agency Unicef said more than three-quarters of children in South Asia – or 460 million – are exposed to temperatures above 35 deg C for at least 83 days per year.

Despite contributing less than 1 per cent to global greenhouse gas emissions, Pakistan has experienced severe weather-related disasters in recent years due to changing weather patterns. AFP

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