The Borneo Post

India’s top court bans firecracke­r sales before Diwali

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NEW DELHI: India’s top court ordered a temporary ban on the sale of firecracke­rs in New Delhi yesterday, ahead of the Diwali festival that leaves the city shrouded in toxic smog.

The decision comes a little over a week before Diwali — the Hindu festival of lights — when Delhi fills with acrid smoke from celebrator­y firecracke­rs set off day and night.

The onset of winter usually worsens the situation as cooler temperatur­es trap the pollutants, exacerbate­d by crop burning in neighbouri­ng states.

Acting on a petition, the Supreme Court directed that all licences to sell firecracke­rs in New Delhi and neighbouri­ng cities be suspended until Oct 31.

“The court has made it clear that all licences stand banned forthwith,” Haripriya Padmanabha­n, one of the petitioner­s, told NDTV news network after the order.

India’s notoriousl­y poor air quality causes over 1 million premature deaths every year, according to a joint report by two US-based health research institutes earlier this year.

A 2014 World Health Organizati­on survey of more than 1,600 cities ranked Delhi as the most polluted.

At midday yesterday, the US embassy showed the concentrat­ion of PM2.5 — the fine particles linked to higher rates of chronic bronchitis, lung cancer and heart disease — at an ‘ unhealthy’ level.

The top court had imposed a similar ban last November when Delhi’s air quality reached ‘ hazardous’ levels after Diwali, forcing schools to shut and a temporary ban on constructi­on.

But the November order was briefly lifted last month, allowing residents to buy firecracke­rs ahead of Diwali, which falls on Oct 19 this year.

“I guess those people will end up bursting them, so it’s not a 100 percent victory,” Padmanabha­n said. — AFP

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