Protesters in northern India clash with
police over power cuts
May 2, 2008 - Associated
Press
LUCKNOW, India: Rioters, some
wearing just underwear, clashed with police
in northern India early Friday in anger over
massive power cuts that left wide swaths of
the region without electricity as summer temperatures
soared, police said.
Police fired tear gas to disperse
the crowds who attacked police vehicles, blocked
roads and rail lines, set an electricity transformer
on fire and attacked electricity workers in
Uttar Pradesh state, police spokesman Surendra
Srivastava said.
Riots were reported in several
cities across the state, he said.
Uttar Pradesh, home to some
180 million people, is one of India's poorest
states. Its inadequate energy infrastructure
has been unable to cope with the high demand
for electricity as temperatures peaked above
40 degrees Celsius (104 degrees Fahrenheit)
in recent days.
Most cities have been getting
just 12 hours of electricity a day. Many people
were left without air conditioning or fans
— and, in some cases, without water, as electric
pumps failed.
More than 250 people had been
detained and charged with rioting, Srivastava
said.
In Gorakhpur, which had been
without electricity for more than 24 hours,
protesters stormed an office of the electricity
board, taking several workers hostage and
beating a few. They also set a nearby electricity
transformer ablaze in the town, 300 kilometers
(190 miles) southeast of the state capital,
Lucknow.
As police tried to disperse
the crowd, many of the men — clad just in
their underwear to beat the heat — taunted
police, challenging them to open fire, Srivastava
said.
State Power Minister Ram Veer
Upadhaya said he expected the power crisis
to continue for at least the next two years.
"There is a big gap between
the demand and supply. Our power stations
do not generate required electricity," he
said.
India faces chronic power shortages
amid growing demand, spurred by its rapid
economic growth, and a lag in building enough
new power stations.