Denemek ALTIN - Özgür

Heat and Apathy

Outlook

|

July 11, 2023

Heat wave-related deaths are not registered with any central or state disaster management agency and there is therefore no provision for compensation

- Md Asghar Khan

Heat and Apathy

MUNNI Devi, 45, a resident of Kokar area in Ranchi, was a daily wage earner. Sometimes, when there was less work, she would take up odd rag-picking jobs. On June 18, after selling the garbage she had picked, she started walking back home at 4 PM.

"She felt dizzy and started vomiting. People from a nearby house offered her water. She collapsed and was rushed to RIMS (Rajendra Institute of Medical Sciences), where she was declared dead," informs her sister Jhariyo Tirkey.

The deceased hailed from Gumla district and had moved to Ranchi to earn a livelihood, leaving behind her husband and two children. Now there is no earning member. Her brother Dinesh Tirkey has filed a case with the Sadar Police Station for want of compensation. The police say they are waiting for the post-mortem report.

Munni Devi is just another casualty of the brutal heat wave that Jharkhand is reeling under. However, like many others, she will not make it to the list of casualties who have died in the state due to the heat wave. No such list exists. And in the absence of any official list, providing compensation to the families of heat wave victims seems like a long shot.

The family of Mala Devi, 62, is not even hopeful of getting any compensation. A resident of Dumariya village in Godda block of Jharkhand, Devi died on June 16, the day the temperature touched 45.9 degree Celsius.

"My aunt was perfectly fine in the morning. At 12 noon, she started feeling unwell and said her throat had gone dry. She did not feel better even after sipping water, so we rushed her to the Sadar Hospital. But by the time we reached, she passed away," says her nephew Anant Jha.

Outlook'den DAHA FAZLA HİKAYE

Outlook

Outlook

Watch the Ball

I remember playing cricket as a seven-year-old in the cricket grounds across the road from our apartment building in north London.

time to read

4 mins

February 11, 2026

Outlook

Outlook

History of Sound

From villages to the national squad, India's blind women cricketers battled disability, patriarchy and caste to win the inaugural World Cup. Beyond sport, their journeys reveal their fight for dignity

time to read

6 mins

February 11, 2026

Outlook

Outlook

One Battle After Another

Women's cricket in Jharkhand is not built on infrastructure, funding or institutional care. It has survived on endurance and sacrifice

time to read

5 mins

February 11, 2026

Outlook

Outlook

“Fix the Pipeline, Not the Pay Cheque”

When Doorva Bahuguna played cricket in the late 1980s and ’90s, there was no money, little recognition, and no illusion that the sport could become a career. You played, she says, because something inside you demanded it. Today, women’s cricket in India has a league, salaries, sponsors, and visibility—but also new constraints, new narratives, and familiar battles over agency, safety and femininity. In conversation with Lalita Iyer, Bahuguna—who captained Andhra Pradesh’s sub-junior, junior and senior cricket teams and later built a corporate career—speaks candidly about why grassroots matter more than pay parity, how sport reshapes women's sense of self; and why the real revolution in women’s cricket is still unfinished.

time to read

5 mins

February 11, 2026

Outlook

Outlook

Where Roses Bloom

If the oligarchs return to Venezuela, the social housing will go, the public schools will go, the healthcare clinics will go, the food parcels will go, and the forests will be cut down

time to read

6 mins

February 11, 2026

Outlook

Outlook

Baramati's Dada

Ajit Pawar's sudden death leaves a power vacuum, but for people, especially from rural pockets in and around Baramati, who considered him a grassroots strongman, the loss is more profound

time to read

5 mins

February 11, 2026

Outlook

Outlook

The Foreigner India Came to Trust

The Indian media fraternity appears unable to live up to Mark Tully's standards of balance, honesty, trustworthiness and credibility

time to read

3 mins

February 11, 2026

Outlook

'Mother of all Trade Deals'

The EU-India trade agreement is an economic bonanza as it will merge two of the world's largest economic blocs into a single trade zone

time to read

3 mins

February 11, 2026

Outlook

Outlook

Fiery Kolhapuri

Pratiksha Pawar's cricketing journey is a reminder that dreams know no boundaries

time to read

6 mins

February 11, 2026

Outlook

Outlook

Spice Girls

In the once nondescript villages of Wayanad, cricket is no longer just a sport. It has become a way to dream and to rise above the limits of geography, poverty and custom

time to read

6 mins

February 11, 2026

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size