Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Delhi feels the chill as cold conditions grip north India

- HT Correspond­ent letters@hindustant­imes.com CONTINUED ON P 6

NEW DELHI: Delhi shivered under severe cold conditions on Saturday as winter took a firm grip across north India, plunging the mercury to 1.8 degrees Celsius at Churu in Rajasthan, the meteorolog­ical department said.

However, the coldest places in India on Saturday were in Jammu and Kashmir — Kargil recording a minimum of minus 11.2 degrees Celsius, Leh minus 9.6 degrees Celsius and Srinagar minus 1.1 degrees Celsius.

The minimum temperatur­e recorded in the national capital was 8 degrees Celsius, one degree above the season’s coldest on Friday. The maximum was recorded at 20.8 degrees Celsius, two degrees below the average.

Though the weather is likely to be slightly warmer from Monday, Met officials said, they added that the minimum temperatur­e will hover around seven-eight degrees for the next three days.

“The north-westerly winds are coming from the direction of Jammu and Himachal Pradesh at present. In a span of 24 hours, this wind direction will change and become westerly and the wind will come from Pakistan and Punjab,” said Kuldeep Srivastava, a senior Met department scientist.

He said the sky will remain clear on Sunday with the maximum and minimum temperatur­es expected to be around 20 and 7 degrees Celsius respective­ly. However, the cold weather and wind have helped reduce Delhi’s notorious pollution to a great extent with a clear blue sky visible to the city’s residents after weeks of thick smog. They came into existence after 1947, saw a golden period in the 1980s, fell in popularity by the late ’90s, but now look ready for a revival. The bewitchmen­t with Indian comic books continues.

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