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  • 8 months ago
Day laborers on construction sites in Pakistan's capital, Islamabad, toil in the open, even as temperatures soar past 45 degrees Celsius. The intense heat brings headaches, dizziness and dehydration, but staying home often means no pay.
Transcript
00:00This year, there was a lot of heat in this year.
00:19In the past few years, there was a lot of heat in this year.
00:24So what do we do?
00:26We don't have any heat in this year.
00:33We don't have any heat in this year.
00:36We don't have any heat in this year.
00:46We don't have any heat in this year.
00:48We don't have any heat in this year.
00:50We don't have any heat in this year.
01:04So what do we need to do is we need to do it.
01:24We need to reduce the working hours in the sunny time
01:28because the afternoon time period that is very very hot for them.
01:34And it is not possible for a human being to tolerate that much high temperature
01:40and directly sitting under the sun and working under the sun.
01:58When it is too hot, it is too hot,
02:04which is due to 2 hours of rest.
02:06And when they work again,
02:08they keep their hands on their hands.
02:11And if they are sick, they take them to hospital.
02:14Then they take them to 2 hours or 3 hours to rest.
02:18After the doctor gives them 1 or 2 days,
02:22therefore we take home costs from full condition.
02:24Hold the nasty stuff on the warm temperature.
02:26Then they don't cut the expenses,
02:29they give us to additional sources,
02:31which they will mistake.
02:33In the warm pressureature we get by the running back.
02:35We will be treated with the air temperature.
02:38We vou to do it for the rainyHAzzy.
02:41It will reduce the conditions in the air.
02:43We adore the rainfall receipt by adding here of the returns.
02:47Oh, here is the rain.
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