Otago Daily Times

Miners make money but the dust blows straight into Delhi

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Asandstone quarry near the village of Sirohi, on the outskirts of the Indian city of New Delhi, is a reminder that it is not just fireworks and crop burning that are causing the capital’s pollution problems.

The site was previously part of the Aravalli mountain range, which stretches nearly 700km through northern and western India.

That was until hundreds of workers hollowed out one of its hills, mining rocks and sand for constructi­on.

It is the same in many other parts of the Aravallis, which used to protect Delhi from dust rolling in from the nearby Thar Desert.

Beginning in October, stubblebur­ning in farmland around Delhi, vehicle and industrial emissions and the lighting of firecracke­rs during Hindu festivals combine to create a toxic haze that can hang over the city for months.

Environmen­tal experts say the dust blowing in from surroundin­g areas, which are becoming increasing­ly arid due to rising temperatur­es and shrinking forests, also plays a role in Delhi’s pollution woes.

In May and June, the capital was hit by huge dust storms that forced residents indoors and cancelled flights, worrying authoritie­s in a period that was outside the main ‘‘pollution season’’ of October to December.

‘‘Mines are making forests shrink, and the mountains used to block sand from other areas,’’ said Kailash Bidhuri, founder of Save Aravalli, an environmen­tal group trying to stop the mining of the hills around Delhi.

‘‘What you see now is the result.’’

The fast disappeara­nce of the hills has also started to worry India’s Supreme Court.

In a longrunnin­g case brought by environmen­tal activists against several defendants, the court recently heard evidence from the Government’s Forest Survey of India, which said it conducted a study of 128 hills and found nearly a quarter of them had disappeare­d.

The court said last month rampant mining was making Delhi’s already toxic air even worse, and ordered an immediate halt to illegal mining in one small section of the range.

But it is doubtful the limited ban will have much impact. Similar bans over the years have been ignored.

Government studies of mining areas in the Aravallis have found significan­t increases in cases of asthma and silicosis, an incurable respirator­y infection caused by the dust the mines kick up.

Compoundin­g the problem, at many mining sites, workers dig below the permitted levels, polluting water supplies, Bidhuri said.

‘‘There were rules and protocols that were not followed.’’

The hill at Sirohi has been dug out, broken up and hauled away, and the mine bosses have moved on to begin again on another hill.

Left behind are villagers who miss the old days, despite the health dangers for them and for Delhi’s residents.

Irshad Zakir Khan said he was worked at the site from when he was a boy — underage, according to the law — until the hill was mined out in 2009.

He was paid about 6000 rupees ($NZ125) a month to haul rocks to a nearby processing plant, where they were crushed. He received a bonus for each trip he completed.

‘‘Since the mines shut we’ve lost earnings,’’ he said, as he perched on his motorbike with a group of friends standing by, nodding in agreement.

‘‘We hope that one day these sites go live again so we can earn.’’

 ??  ?? Out of pocket . . . Irshad Zakir Khan at the quarry where he used to work.
Out of pocket . . . Irshad Zakir Khan at the quarry where he used to work.

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