Around 40 people are dying a day in Myanmar from soaring temperatures and animals are at risk from a lack of water in a Cambodian wildlife sanctuary as record hot weather lingers over most of Southeast Asia. In Vietnam, where temperatures are driving people indoors across the country, forecasters said they are expecting that temperatures in May will again be hotter than normal

In war-torn Myanmar, where many people have fled from their homes over the last few years and have inadequate shelter, the hot temperatures have been behind an increase in deaths since mid-March. At least 1,473 people died in Myanmar from heat-related causes in April alone, according to numbers compiled by Radio Free Asia through funeral services and health officials in some of the country’s hottest cities.

In the central Mandalay region, about 900 people deaths were related to the extreme heat, according to M-Rescue Corps, a volunteer ambulance and rescue service. “The heat wave was so high in the past two or three days that people died while walking or riding a motorcycle, while some people died while in a car,” a M-Rescue Corps member said. In Yangon, Myanmar’s commercial capital, the local free funeral association provided 441 free funeral services in April – an increase from 340 in March, an association official told RFA.

Many of the deaths in Magway region have come from elderly people or people who have chronic diseases such as high blood pressure or diabetes, according to an official from the Myanmar Rescue Team organization there. Children are also dealing with heat stroke, according to a resident of an internally displaced camp in Sagaing region’s Kawlin township. Also, many of the adults in the camp have to continue working outside in order to eat, he said.

“Adults have to work under any weather conditions,” he said. “As a result, they commonly suffer heatstroke, dehydration and diarrhea. They do not feel as comfortable as at home, and they suffer restlessness.” The military junta’s Health Ministry hasn’t announced any heat-related death numbers. Ministry officials weren’t available for comments when RFA tried to reach them on Wednesday.

Wild boars and dry rivers

In northwestern Cambodia, there are worries about whether the many rare species of wildlife living in the Sang Rukhavoan community forest – including raccoons, monkeys and wild boars – will have enough water to survive. The Stung Streng river, the main water source for animals in the sanctuary, is already running low and is expected to become even more shallow because of the hot weather, according to Venerable Ton Bunlin, the chief of the Forest Monk Patrol Team.

People who live in the sanctuary use the river for fishing and as a source for drinking water and to irrigate crops during the current dry season, which began three months ago, he said. The fishermen tend to scare away deer and wild boar from the river, according to another monk who works to maintain the forest, the Venerable Lon Bunlin.

Some of the animals lay down in the river to cool down in hot weather, but the river is too shallow or has completely dried out in some places, he said. The Cambodian government created the 30,000 hectares wildlife sanctuary in 2018 in Oddar Meanchey province. The sanctuary includes the Sang Rukhavoan community forest and other forest communities. RFA was unable to contact the province’s Environment Department director for comment on Wednesday. Provincial Gov. Pen Kosal also couldn’t be reached for comment.