Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Indian students protest pollution

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NEW DELHI — Hundreds of students marched Wednesday in India’s capital to demand action to improve the city’s toxic air.

New Delhi has been wrapped in a choking haze for much of the past week. The smog did lift a little in time for the march at Nehru Park by students from 15 private schools.

The march was organized by representa­tives from the United Nations, private schools and the Sonalika company, a tractor maker.

Charvi Thakkar, 13, said the pollution has risen to an extreme level and that her grandmothe­r, uncle and brother were no longer able to comfortabl­y breathe.

“We need to stop this,” she said. “Because this is what we are providing for our children, for the next generation. If we are not able to breathe properly, then there is no future.”

Teacher Neeraj Chhiber said that when she moved to Delhi 25 years ago, it felt a little dusty at this time of year but nowhere near as bad as it is now.

Environmen­talist Vasu Primlani said she believes a series of low-cost initiative­s could halve the city’s pollution problem within two years.

Meanwhile, India’s health minister favorably compared the capital’s air to a massive 1984 gas leak in the city of Bhopal that killed as many as 15,000 people.

“We call that an emergency situation where you have to panic,” Harsh Vardhan told a television channel on Tuesday. His comment was quickly ridiculed.

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