Flawed policies to blame as India’s poor struggles with soaring temperatures

Shantabai Babulkar’s day begins before dawn with a 5km trek across barren fields and dusty scrubland to fetch water from a distant well.
She balances two metal pots of muddy water atop her head, and carries a third in the crook of her arm – the only water she and her family of five will have for the day’s needs of drinking, cooking and washing.
Babulkar’s village of Shahapur, in Thane district of the west Indian state of Maharashtra, is in the grips of one of the worst droughts in decades. Parched fields, burnt crops and wasted cattle have helped drive up the number of suicides by distressed farmers unable to repay their loans.
Tens of thousands have left their farms in search of menial jobs, with many joining the ranks of the unemployed poor in the cities.
The vast Indian hinterland has long faced water shortages, especially in the torrid months from April to June, before the annual monsoon rains bring some relief.
The showers, which normally run from June to September, are crucial in a country where 60 per cent of the 1.25 billion population works in agriculture and less than half the farmland is irrigated.