 LUCKNOW, India: Rioters angered by frequent power outages in India’s largest
state assaulted a senior official and attacked power stations, setting one
ablaze, authorities said yesterday. At least 18 people were arrested.
Hours-long power outages – which leave people without air conditioners or
fans in northern India’s 38-degree Celsius heat – are common across India
and rarely spark riots.
But frustration from a week of sweltering summer temperatures with no cooling
rains appeared to be the cause of the riots that broke out late on Tuesday
in several towns and cities in Uttar Pradesh.
In the state’s capital, Lucknow, at least 18 people were arrested after trying
to set a power substation on fire, said Surendra Srivastava, a police spokesman
in the city.
In Balrampur, an impoverished district northeast of Lucknow, a power station
was set ablaze by about 150 supporters of the ruling socialist Samajwadi
party. The violence prompted utility workers to stage a strike Wednesday,
and they only returned to work after police promised to take action against
the protesters.
Another mob damaged a power station in Gorakhpur, 200 km east of Lucknow,
Srivastava said.
Angry crowds roughed up the state’s minister for jails, Rakesh Verma, in
Bara Banki, a town 30 km northeast of Lucknow. The minister managed to escape
and took shelter in a nearby police station, officials said.
Protests were also reported in the towns of Sitapur and Kanpur, although
it was not clear if there were any injuries or property damage.
The violence prompted Uttar Pradesh’s top elected official, Chief Minister
Mulayam Singh Yadav, to suspend 10 other officials yesterday while he investigates
the power problems.
Officials blamed the power cuts on high demand for electricity during hot
summer days. An engineer at the Uttar Pradesh Power Corp., Shailendra Dubey,
said the state had a shortfall of hundreds of megawatts each day.
The power outages are so frequent that many places in Uttar Pradesh get electricity
for just 10 hours a day.
“The situation is bad and there is very little room for improvement soon,”
said Ashok Kumar, another executive at the power utility. –
AP
photro: An Indian homeless man prepares to cook under a bridge in Bombay
yesterday as the city struggled to return to normal in the wake of unprecedented
rains last week. – Reuters Last update on: 4-8-2005 |