Millions kept home from school as Southeast Asia swelters under weeks-long heat wave
Temperature tops 48 C in Myanmar; dozens dead in Philippines so far this year
Southeast Asia was coping with a weeks-long heat wave on Monday as record-high temperatures led to school closings in several countries and urgent health warnings throughout the region.
Millions of students in all public schools across the Philippines were ordered to stay home Monday after authorities cancelled in-person classes for two days. The main advice for everyone, everywhere has been to avoid outdoor activities and drink plenty of water, but the young and the elderly were told to be especially careful.
Cambodia this year is facing the highest temperatures in 170 years, Chan Yutha, a spokesperson for the Ministry of Water Resources and Meteorology, told The Associated Press on Monday. His agency has forecast that temperatures in most parts of the country could reach up to 43 C this week.
Myanmar's meteorological department said Monday that seven townships in the central Magway, Mandalay, Sagaing and Bago regions experienced record-high temperatures.
Several towns in Myanmar last week were on lists of the hottest spots worldwide.
Chauk township in Magway, historically the country's hottest region, saw Myanmar's highest temperature at 48.2 C, breaking the previous record of 47.4 C set in 1968.
Fears of water shortages, crop damage
The Philippines is among the nations worst affected by the sweltering weather in Southeast Asia, where the intense tropical summer heat worsened by humidity forced class cancellations in recent weeks and sparked fears of water shortages, power outages and damage to agricultural crops.
The Department of Education ordered students in more than 47,000 public schools to switch to home-based and online learning due to health risks from record-high temperatures and a three-day strike starting Monday by drivers who oppose a government program they fear would remove dilapidated passenger jeepneys from streets.
Large crowds have sought relief in air-conditioned shopping malls in Metropolitan Manila, the congested capital region of more than 14 million people where the temperature soared to 38.8 C on Saturday, surpassing the record set decades ago, according to weather officials.
In Thailand, temperatures have topped 44 C in some areas in the northern parts of the country, while the capital Bangkok and metropolitan areas have seen temperatures go above 40 C. The forecast from the meteorological department said this year's summer, which usually lasts from late February to late May, is expected to be one to two degrees hotter than last year, and rainfall will be lower than average.
Thailand's Department of Disease Control said last week that at least 30 people have died from heat stroke so far this year, compared to 37 for all of last year.
Scientists have said the number of heat-related deaths around the world has been rising significantly in recent years along with temperatures, but the trend in Asia this year so far is unclear, partly because of the question of how to classify deaths that appear to be heat related.
At least 34 people have fallen ill due to the extreme heat in the Philippines so far this year, including six who died. The Department of Health said it was verifying what exactly caused the deaths.
Media in Bangladesh reported that in a five-day period earlier this month, at least 20 people died from heat stroke.
In Cambodia, however, officials indicated there were few if any heat-related fatalities. The Khmer Times, an online news platform, quoted the head of the Health Department of Phnom Penh, the capital, saying there had been no heat-related deaths or collapses.