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          Patna, March 29 (IANS) In   power-starved Bihar, thousands of cricket fans are not taking any chances. They   are turning to their rusty transistors for succour just in case electricity   outages make their TV sets useless during the India-Pakistan semifinal   Wednesday.
          
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 Mukesh Kumar Singh and Shahzad Anwar, both diehard cricket   fans, have decided to stay tuned to the match with their old transistor radios.
 
 Singh, a businessman in his early 30s in Gaya district, about 100 km   from here, said a power failure could rob him of a chance to watch the matches   live, so he has settled for the radio.
 
 "I am not alone. Power shortage   has disappointed thousands in Gaya during the World Cup. Youths are angry at the   prospect of missing watching the India-Pakistan clash live on television," said   Singh, stressing the power situation in Gaya has worsened over the past   decade.
 
 "We expected an improvement from Nitish Kumar's government but   nothing has happened. We watched 60 percent of the World Cup matches in 2003 and   2007 but this time it's hardly 25 percent," Singh told IANS.
 
 Anwar, a   student in his early 20s from Aurangabad district, said it was unfortunate that   thousands would miss a chance to watch the India-Pakistan match live on   television due to the power crisis.
 
 The power crisis in Bihar is nothing   new. It has prompted thousands of cricket fans to wipe the dust off their old   and virtually forgotten portable radio sets or to buy new transistors so as not   to miss the most important World Cup clash - the India-Pakistan match in   Mohali.
 
 Cricket fanatics like Anwar said they and others in most parts of   Bihar could not watch the quarter-finals between India and Australia and between   Pakistan and the West Indies because of power failures.
 
 Bihar's   legislators, in view of the soaring cricket fever, have urged the government to   provide uninterrupted power supply in the state Wednesday to ensure that people   watch the India-Pakistan match live on television.
 
 Ruling Janata   Dal-United legislator Ajit Kumar said the government should do something to   supply uninterrupted power for the sake of millions of cricket   fans.
 
 However, power officials rue that things are not going to improve   Wednesday, blaming a drastic cut in supply from the central grid to   Bihar.
 
 Bihar requires 1,800-2,000 MW of power a day but gets only 700-750   MW from the central pool, despite a daily allocation of 1,646 MW, say   officials.
 
 Most parts of the state, including capital Patna, have been   witnessing long power cuts.
 
 Protests against acute power shortages   continued for the fourth consecutive day Tuesday with people blocking roads,   ransacking electricity offices and burning rubber tyres, police   said.
 
 Leader of opposition Abdul Bari Siddiqui, a cricket fan himself,   said lack of power has dampened the hopes of cricket lovers.
 
 "When   everyone across India enjoy the India-Pakistan match, millions in Bihar will   miss it," he said.
 
 On the flip side, portable radios and batteries are   selling like hot cakes.
 
 "People are buying radios and batteries and some   people are getting their old radios repaired," said Santosh Mahto, who owns a   small electronic shop in Vaishali district.
 
 Mazhar Khan of Raghunathpur   village in Aurangabad is very happy. He and his friends plan to watch the Mohali   match on television by using batteries charged by solar power. "There are few   lucky fans like me!" he said.
 
      
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