Most deaths are of the elderly collapsing in long bank queues.

ASSOCIATED PRESS
A man holds a charred facsimile of the discontinued Indian currency 500 note after a protest by a traders association demanding adequate arrangement to exchange discontinued currency notes outside Reserve Bank of India in Kolkata, India, Wednesday, Nov. 16, 2016. (AP Photo/Bikas Das)

Eight days into demonetisation, the death toll has reached 47. These are confirmed deaths reported in the national media. The number of unreported deaths may be higher. While most deaths are of the elderly waiting in long bank queues, there are quite a few suicides, especially of housewives.

  1. “It was a long queue and he was said to have been waiting for hours,” said a government official on the death of a septuagenarian, Ram Chandra Paswan who died in a bank queue in Palamu, Jharkhand. (Indian Express)
  2. In Ballia, Uttar Pradesh, Suresh Sonar died of a heart attack after failing to exchange currency notes despite spending hours at the bank. His family said he was distressed as money was needed for his daughter’s tilak ceremony. (Press Trust of India)
  3. In rural Pune, a bank peon, Tukaram Tanpure, 53, died of a massive heart attack. His colleagues said he, like everyone else, was stressed handling large crowds and working 12 hours a day. (Hindustan Times)
  4. In Maharashtra’s Nanded district, Digambar Kasbe, 60, died after collapsing in a bank queue. He had been standing for hours. (Hindustan Times)
  5. Lavkush, 20, died in Jharkhand’s Bokaro district because of the economic stress caused by demonetisation. His daily wager father had been unable to get work because of demonetisation. (IANS)
  6. When Lavkush’s grandmother Lakshmi, 70, heard of her grandson’s death, she died of shock. (IANS)
  7. In Siddipet district of Telangana, Balaiah, a 45-year-old farmer, died after he mixed pesticide in his food. He had been trying to sell his agricultural land but was stressed because its price came down from ₹6-7 lakh per acre to ₹2-3 lakh after demonetisation. He was under debt. (Press Trust of India)
  8. In the incident in Siddepet above, Balaiah’s 65-year-old father Galaiah also died. Balaiah’s wife and son are in hospital. (Press Trust of India)
  9. Saud Ur Rehman, 48, died in a bank queue in old Delhi after waiting for hours. It was his second day of trying to exchange old notes. “He would reach the branch around 5 am and wait for hours in queue, but by the time his turn would come, either the bank went out of cash or the counters closed,” said a family member. (Press Trust of India)
  10. Khaliq Hasan, 56, collapsed and died in a bank queue in Bareilly. His family members said he was stressed due to demonetisation. (Press Trust of India)
  11. Deepak Shah, 60, died after collapsing in a bank queue in Mumbai. (Indian Express)
    ASSOCIATED PRESS
    A fruit vendor awaits customers as Indians stand in a queue to exchange discontinued currency notes outside a post office in Hyderabad, India, Sunday, Nov. 13, 2016. Chaotic scenes played out across India over the weekend, with long lines growing even longer and scuffles breaking out, as millions of anxious people tried to change old currency notes that became worthless days earlier when the government demonetized high-value bills.(AP Photo/Mahesh Kumar A.)
  12. Sanjay Prajapat, 23, collapsed and died after rushing home to fetch his father’s Aadhaar card so he could exchange old notes at the bank. (HuffPost India)
  13. Vijaya Lakshmi, 70, died in Krishna district of Andhra Pradesh as she entered a bank to exchange her ₹500 notes. (The Hans)
  14. Dharani Kanta Bhowmik, a 56-year-old teacher in West Bengal’s Cooch Behar district, died after queuing up for three consecutive days to exchange currency notes. (Ananda Bazaar Patrika)
  15. Four days before his daughter’s wedding, Sukhdev Singh died of heart attack in Tarn Taran, Punjab. Surjit Kaur, wife of the deceased, said, “Nobody was accepting the money we had saved for daughter’s marriage. My husband was tense due to this. He had complained of chest pain and died.” (Indian Express)
  16. Sumit, the 17-year-old son of a BSF jawan in Bulandshahr, Uttar Pradesh, committed suicide as his mother won’t give him small denomination notes. (Press Trust of India)
  17. A 2-year-old unwell child died in Sambalpur, Odisha, as an autorickshaw drivers refused to take the family to the hospital for want of smaller denomination notes. The family had now-illegal 500 rupee notes. (Report Odisha)
  18. Lakshminarayana, 75, collapsed and died while waiting in a long queue for over two hours at an Andhra Bank branch Secunderabad, Telangana. He had gone to deposit ₹1.7 lakh. The bank didn’t have a separate queue for senior citizens. (IANS)
  19. In Aurangabad, Bihar, an elderly man, Surendra Sharma, died while waiting in a bank queue. (Daudnagar)
  20. Halke Lodhi, a farmer in Chhatarpur district of Madhya Pradesh, committed suicide as he didn’t have money to buy fertiliser and seeds in time for the Rabi sowing season. “Had he got money from the bank in exchange of his old notes, he would not have committed suicide,” said his relative Bhupendra Lodhi. (Hindustan Times)
  21. Aziz Ansari, a 60-year-old factor worker in Meerut, died of a heart attack in a bank. It was his third day of trying to exchange currency notes. (Times of India)
  22. Raghunath Verma, a 70-year-old retired school teacher in Jalaun, eastern Uttar Pradesh, died at a bank queue. His son Ravi said, “We needed ₹2 lakh for the marriage expenses. My father went to the bank for three days. He had spoken to the bank manager many times asking him to help with the withdrawal and exchange. The manager did not listen to him. He even fell on the manager’s feet on Saturday.” (Hindustan Times)
  23. In the Bulandshahr (west UP) branch of Kailash hospital, owned by union culture and tourism minister Mahesh Sharma, a child died because the parents had only old currency notes. The hospital wanted them to deposit an advance of ₹10,000 for admission. The hospital has denied the charge. (One India)
  24. Rizwana, a 24-year-old woman in north-east Delhi hanged herself to the ceiling fan with her dupatta as she was upset about not being able to exchange currency for three days. (Indian Express)
  25. In Surat, Gujarat, a 50-year-old mother of two committed suicide because she wasn’t able to buy ration to feed her family. The shops refused to accept old currency notes. (Times of India)
  26. Shabana, a 20-year-old woman in Shamli (west UP) committed suicide. Her brother, returning home after failing to exchange currency at the bank, found her hanging from the ceiling fan. (India Samvad)
    HINDUSTAN TIMES VIA GETTY IMAGES
    NEW DELHI, INDIA – NOVEMBER 16: People in queue outside a bank to deposit and exchange 500 and 1000 currency notes at Paharganj, on November 16, 2016 in New Delhi (Photo by Arvind Yadav/Hindustan Times via Getty Images)
  27. In Chikballapur district of Karnataka, a 40-year-old woman committed suicide because ₹15,000 that she had gone to the bank to exchange got lost or stolen. She had hidden the money from her alcoholic husband. (New Indian Express)
  28. In Raigarh, Chhattisgarh, a 45-year-old farmer was upset at not being able to exchange ₹3,000 at the bank for three consecutive days. He needed to send money to his stranded children in Tamil Nadu. He came home and committed suicide. (Press Trust of India)
  29. In Limbdi town of Surendranagar district in Gujarat, a 69-year-old collapsed and died of heart attack waiting in a queue to exchange currency notes at a Bank of India branch. (Press Trust of India)
  30. An elderly woman living by herself in Kanpur died while counting her notes. Police found ₹2.69 lakh worth of old currency notes alongside her body. (Dainik Bhaskar)
  31. Also in Kanpur, a young man died of heart attack while watching prime minister Narendra Modi’s announcement of demonetisation. The man had received ₹70 lakhs in advance for selling his land just the previous day. He had been trying to sell his land for months. (ABP News)
  32. In Mumbai, a hospital refused to admit an ill newborn because the parents didn’t have legal tender. The child died. The government has allowed the use of old currency notes only in government-run hospitals. (Mumbai Mirror)
  33. Komali, an 18-month-old baby died in Vizag as the parents didn’t have money to buy medicines. The private hospital refused to accept old currency notes of ₹500 or 1,000. (Times of India)
  34. Doctors in Mainpuri in Uttar Pradesh stopped treating one year old Kush, suffering from high fever, after his parents ran out of 100 rupee notes. The parents brought him home, where he soon died, his father’s 500 rupee notes now worthless. (Times of India)
  35. In Pali district of Rajasthan, the ambulance wouldn’t take Champalal Meghwal’s new born to hospital as he only had ₹500 and 1,000 notes. By the time Meghwal arranged 100 rupee notes, the child had died. (Indian Express)
  36. In Kushinagar district of Uttar Pradesh, a washerwoman came to know of demonetisation only when she reached a bank to deposit two 1,000 rupee notes she had saved. When told these were no longer legal tender, she died of shock. (Hindustan Times)
  37. Kandukuri Vinoda, 55, a home-maker in Mahbubabad district of Telangana, committed suicide because she thought her cash savings of ₹54 lakh were now worthless. She had earned the cash by selling land to pay for her husband’s treatment, daughter’s dowry and buy a smaller piece of land. (Hindustan Times)
    ASSOCIATED PRESS
    An Indian woman squats on the ground while waiting in a queue to deposit and exchange discontinued currency notes outside a bank on the outskirts of New Delhi, India, Tuesday, Nov. 15, 2016. India’s government said Tuesday that it will mark the fingers of people swapping scrapped currency notes at banks with indelible ink as authorities struggle to deal with the corruption and bedlam spawned by the demonetizing of the country’s highest denomination currency. (AP Photo/Altaf Qadri)
  38. In Howrah, West Bengal, a man tense over demonetisation, murdered his wife Madhu Tiwary because she returned empty-handed from the ATM. He felt she should have waited longer in the queue. (Times of India)
  39. In Kaimur district of Bihar, 45-year-old Ram Awadh Sah died of a massive heart attack as he feared his daughter’s would-be in-laws may no longer accept his old currency notes in dowry. He had saved up ₹35,000. (India Today)
  40. In Thalassery, Kerala, 45-year-old KK Unni went to deposit ₹5 lakh for the second day, after being unsuccessful on the first. He fell from the second floor while filling the deposit slip and died. An employee of the state electricity board, the man had taken the money as loan just the previous day. Local media reports said he was disturbed as he had not been able to change the currency notes. (New Indian Express)
  41. Vishwas Vartak, 72, died of a massive heart attack while waiting to deposit old currency notes at a bank in Mumbai. (Hindustan Times)
  42. Barkat Sheikh, a 47-year-old farmer had a heart attack waiting to exchange old currency notes in Tarapur in Gujarat. He needed money to pay farm labour. (Press Trust of India)
  43. In Alappuzha, Kerala, 75-year-old Karthikeyan collapsed before a bank and died. He had been waiting for an hour in the queue. (The News Minute)
  44. In Udupi in Karnataka, Gopala Shetty, a 96-year-old man died waiting in a long queue at the bank, and the bank hadn’t even opened yet. (Times of India)
  45. 69-year-old Vinay Kumar Pandey, a retired BSNL employee, died waiting in a queue at the bank to exchange currency notes in Sagar, Madhya Pradesh. (Press Trust of India)
  46. In Bhopal, a State Bank of India cashier died of heart attack. Bank employees have been putting in extra hours and handling large queues. (Hindustan Times)
  47. A businessman in Faizabad, Uttar Pradesh, felt chest pain soon after watching prime minister Narendra Modi’s 8 November announcement of demonetisation. He died before the doctor could arrive. (Financial Express)http://www.huffingtonpost.in/2016/11/16/day-8-demonetisation-death-toll-rises-to-47/