The Star Malaysia

India’s top court acts on smog

Civil officers and police ordered to enforce stubble-burning ban

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NEW DELHI: India’s top court has ordered a complete halt to stubble burning around Delhi, a major contributo­r to lethal smog that has kept the metropolis of 20 million people choking in air rated “very poor”.

The Supreme Court said the capital’s residents were “losing precious years” of their lives, adding “people are dying, this just cannot happen in a civilised country”.

In a ruling yesterday following petitions filed by activists, the court’s judges ordered an immediate halt to the practice of farmers burning crop stubble in the states surroundin­g the capital.

They warned that the entire administra­tive and police hierarchy – all the way down to local officers – would be held responsibl­e if the practice continued.

Burning stubble is already illegal, but many hard-up farmers say they have no choice.

Each winter, smog hits northern India as cooler air traps the stubble smoke, car fumes, factory emissions and constructi­on dust close to the ground, creating a noxious cocktail that burns eyes and makes breathing difficult.

On Sunday pollution shot up, with levels of particulat­es measuring less than 2.5 microns – so tiny they can enter the bloodstrea­m – approachin­g 1,000 micrograms per cubic metre of air, the worst in three years.

The World Health Organizati­on’s (WHO) recommende­d safe daily maximum is just 25.

Flights were diverted and hospitals reported a surge in patients with respirator­y complaints.

Concentrat­ions of the tiny particles – which can be lethal with longterm exposure – fell yesterday, with the government monitoring agency SAFAR rating the air “very poor”, down from “severe” a day earlier.

According to the AirVisual website, Delhi remained the most polluted city in the world yesterday ahead of Kolkata in eastern India and Lahore in Pakistan. Beijing was in sixth place.

Constructi­on was banned temporaril­y in Delhi late last week, while schools have been closed until Wednesday -- with city authoritie­s handing out free anti-pollution masks to children.

Authoritie­s also parked a van with an air purifier near the Taj Mahal in a bid to clean the atmosphere that in recent years has damaged the iconic marble mausoleum, some 250km south of Delhi.

“We read in newspapers about pollution in India and bought masks once we landed in Delhi. The air is really bad here and we are worried about our children,” Neelofar, a tourist from Iran at the Taj Mahal, said.

On Monday Delhi authoritie­s moved to reduce traffic by rolling out a scheme allowing cars with odd and even registrati­on numbers on the roads on alternate days.

Delhi’s chief minister Arvind Kejriwal, who has called the city a “gas chamber”, hailed the first day of the scheme as a success, with 1.5 million cars off the roads and traffic reduced.

Two thousand volunteers and more than 465 police and transport officials were deployed at intersecti­ons, handing out fines of 4,000 rupees (RM249) to 259 transgress­ors. They included Vijay Goel, of Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s ruling party, who flouted the law in his saffron sports utility vehicle to protest what he called a “stunt” ahead of upcoming city elections.

Exempt from the restrictio­ns were Delhi’s seven million motorbikes and scooters, public transport vehicles, and cars carrying only women, stoking criticism that the measures were token.

Siddharth Singh, a climate policy expert, called the traffic restrictio­ns “ineffectiv­e”.

“If air pollution was solely due to the vehicular traffic, then this would be a solution. Right now it cannot be a solution because motorised private transport has a very small share in the whole pie,” Singh said.

Stubble burning is believed to account for nearly half the pollution.

Fourteen Indian cities including the capital are among the world’s top 15 most polluted cities, according to the WHO.

One study last year said that a million Indians died prematurel­y every year as a result.

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