Section 144 authorises officials to prohibit a gathering of more than four people.
Read moreChennai
Three people die amid protests against a new law which offers Indian citizenship to non-Muslims.
Read moreThe foam is said to be caused by pollutants in sewage mixing with sea water and frothed by waves.
P Rajagopal's death comes nine days after the Supreme Court rejected a plea for bail on medical grounds.
Read moreChennai is India's sixth largest city, but its residents are relying on trucks and trains to bring them water.
How can India tackle its water crisis?
Twenty-one of India’s major cities may run out of ground water as early as 2020 according to a government report. Some experts contest that assessment but daily water woes are a part of life for almost half of the country’s population. The southern city of Chennai, where reservoirs are drying up due to a delayed monsoon and poor water management, is severely affected. Residents there have been queuing up to collect water from rationed government services, and schools, hospitals and restaurants are struggling to cope. Meanwhile, the Indian government has set up a new Jal Shakti (water power) Ministry, and is proposing a massive project to interlink India’s rivers as an answer to the water crisis. We focus on water conservation and management solutions to India’s water crisis. We speak to a water activist based in Chennai who restores lakes and ponds, the head of a Delhi-based non-profit that works to recharge groundwater, and a water expert who specialises in rural irrigation economy and policy making. Presenter: Devina Gupta Contributors: Aditi Mukherjee, Principal Researcher, International Water Management Institute; Jyoti Sharma, President, FORCE Non-profit; Arun Krishnamurthy, Founder, Environmentalist Foundation of India
The city's recent water crisis has exposed the effects of climate change and its vulnerabilities.
Read moreImran Qureshi
BBC Hindi
Residents in the Indian city have been forced to go to drastic lengths to get water after months of poor rainfall.
Read moreChennai, home to more than four million people, is relying on tankers to supply its water.
Read moreChennai's severe water shortage has forced restaurants to shut and the city to scramble for solutions.
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