Muslaka-E-Ansari from Srikrishanpur villager suffers from serious cancerous arsenic and has been admitted in the arsenic clinic for leg amputsation in West Bengal
Zeatan Vaivha of Rezalpara, Nauda is an old widow who has cancerous wound on her hand. She travelled very inconvenient trip all the way to Kolkata to the only arsenic clinic in West Bengal also b’cos no family to help her out. She lives alone and continues to be seen by the villager doctor who doesn’t know the single thing about arsenic in West Bengal
A boy drinks water from the dried up Pala rivulet in Kyara-Ka-Khet village in Udaipur district, southern Rajasthan. The southern and western regions of the state face acute water scarcity amid poor availability of groundwater and surface water, coupled with a severe heatwave since the onset of summer. As of mid-April, as many as 208 towns were receiving additional water supplies from the state. The Pali-Marwar region, which is suffering severe water scarcity because of the drying up of Jawai dam, has been receiving 8 million litres of water daily since April 15 through a special train from Jodhpur.
A boy drinks water from the dried up Pala rivulet in Kyara-Ka-Khet village in Udaipur district, southern Rajasthan. The southern and western regions of the state face acute water scarcity amid poor availability of groundwater and surface water, coupled with a severe heatwave since the onset of summer. As of mid-April, as many as 208 towns were receiving additional water supplies from the state. The Pali-Marwar region, which is suffering severe water scarcity because of the drying up of Jawai dam, has been receiving 8 million litres of water daily since April 15 through a special train from Jodhpur.
A boy drinks water from the dried up Pala rivulet in Kyara-Ka-Khet village in Udaipur district, southern Rajasthan. The southern and western regions of the state face acute water scarcity amid poor availability of groundwater and surface water, coupled with a severe heatwave since the onset of summer. As of mid-April, as many as 208 towns were receiving additional water supplies from the state. The Pali-Marwar region, which is suffering severe water scarcity because of the drying up of Jawai dam, has been receiving 8 million litres of water daily since April 15 through a special train from Jodhpur.
A man covers his head amid hot, dry weather in Pahari town of Madhya Pradesh’s Shivpuri district. The state saw heatwave conditions in the second week of May, with Ratlam district recording the highest maximum temperature of 46°C on May 9. The same day, temperatures in Madhya Pradesh’s four major cities – Bhopal, Indore, Jabalpur and Gwalior-were 1-2°C above normal. The India Meteorological Department says the heatwave was due to a trough running across Punjab, Haryana, Rajasthan and northwest Madhya Pradesh.
A man covers his head amid hot, dry weather in Pahari town of Madhya Pradesh’s Shivpuri district. The state saw heatwave conditions in the second week of May, with Ratlam district recording the highest maximum temperature of 46°C on May 9. The same day, temperatures in Madhya Pradesh’s four major cities – Bhopal, Indore, Jabalpur and Gwalior-were 1-2°C above normal. The India Meteorological Department says the heatwave was due to a trough running across Punjab, Haryana, Rajasthan and northwest Madhya Pradesh.
A man covers his head amid hot, dry weather in Pahari town of Madhya Pradesh’s Shivpuri district. The state saw heatwave conditions in the second week of May, with Ratlam district recording the highest maximum temperature of 46°C on May 9. The same day, temperatures in Madhya Pradesh’s four major cities – Bhopal, Indore, Jabalpur and Gwalior-were 1-2°C above normal. The India Meteorological Department says the heatwave was due to a trough running across Punjab, Haryana, Rajasthan and northwest Madhya Pradesh.
A man covers his head amid hot, dry weather in Pahari town of Madhya Pradesh’s Shivpuri district. The state saw heatwave conditions in the second week of May, with Ratlam district recording the highest maximum temperature of 46°C on May 9. The same day, temperatures in Madhya Pradesh’s four major cities – Bhopal, Indore, Jabalpur and Gwalior-were 1-2°C above normal. The India Meteorological Department says the heatwave was due to a trough running across Punjab, Haryana, Rajasthan and northwest Madhya Pradesh.