Jacobabad is in the grip of the latest heatwave to hit South Asia, peaking at 51 degrees Celsius. Canals in the city—a vital source of irrigation for nearby farms— have run dry, with a smattering of stagnant water barely visible around strewn rubbish
Jacobabad, Pakistan: By the time Pakistani schoolboy Saeed Ali arrived at hospital in one of the world's hottest cities, his body was shutting down from heatstroke.
The 12-year-old collapsed after walking home from school under the burning sun, his day spent sweltering in a classroom with no fans.
"A rickshaw driver had to carry my son here. He couldn't even walk," the boy's mother Shaheela Jamali told AFP from his bedside.
Jacobabad in Pakistan's arid Sindh province is in the grip of the latest heatwave to hit South Asia—peaking at 51 degrees Celsius (124 Fahrenheit) at the weekend.
Canals in the city—a vital source of irrigation for nearby farms—have run dry, with a smattering of stagnant water barely visible around strewn rubbish.