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Cold in north India claims over 40 lives

North India continues to face extreme weather conditions with the cold wave sweeping through Uttar Pradesh claiming more than 30 lives in a 24-hour span, reports said on Thursday.

New Delhi: An intense cold wave is sweeping north India, resulting in over 40 deaths Thursday, officials said. At least 30 people died of the cold in Uttar Pradesh alone in the 24 hours to Thursday evening.
The mercury dropped below four degrees Celsius in many parts of Uttar Pradesh. Even though the fog receded in several parts of the state, the cold continued to bite. The state government had allocated over Rs.15 crore for blankets for distribution among the poor and homeless. The tendering process, however, is still to begin in several districts. The Uttar Pradesh government had also announced shelter facilities and bonfires for the homeless and the destitute, but even these moves failed to fructify in time. Although there are nearly 17 shelter homes, these are largely poorly furnished, and the poor who seek shelter here are forced to lie on the ground, with no blankets. On Thursday, there were 11 deaths reported from Bihar. The toll to inclement weather in the state this year has so far reached 18. A.K. Sen, an official with the met department in Patna, said that chilly northwesterly winds would continue for the next two days. At Gaya, the minimum temperature dipped to 4.6 degrees Celsius, the lowest in Bihar. In Tripura, three people died as a mini-truck in which they were traveling overturned in foggy conditions. In Himachal Pradesh, where snow is celebrated each year and locals remain prepared for winter, no deaths were reported. In the higher reaches in Lahaul and Spiti, Kinnaur, Kullu and Shimla districts, there was light snowfall Thursday. Keylong in Lahaul and Spiti, which experienced 1 cm of snow, was the coldest town in the state with a low of 6.7 degrees Celsius below freezing point. The weatherman said western disturbances are expected to recede after Dec 29, and Himachal would see drier days. IANS