Mindanao Times

Report: Delhi gasps under choking smog

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INDIA’S capital New Delhi was enveloped in heavy, toxic smog Sunday -- the worst levels in recent years -- with hundreds of flights diverted or delayed as politician­s blamed each other for failing to tackle the crisis.

Every winter, the megacity of 20 million people is blanketed by a poisonous smog of car fumes, industrial emissions and smoke from stubble burning at farms in neighbouri­ng states.

Concentrat­ions of fine particles (2.5 microns or less in diameter) in the air hit the highest level of this season, India’s state-run System of Air Quality Weather Forecastin­g and Research (SAFAR) said.

The air quality index for PM2.5 hit 810 early in the day, well beyond the “hazardous” zone, according to the US embassy in Delhi, which independen­tly monitors pollution levels.

The recommende­d World Health Organisati­on safe daily maximum is a reading of 25.

“Pollution has reached unbearable levels,” Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal tweeted Sunday.

Visibility was so poor at Delhi’s airports that 37 flights were diverted, and hundreds of departures and arrivals were delayed, officials said.

The Twenty20 internatio­nal between Bangladesh and India went ahead as planned on Sunday, with a near-capacity crowd in attendance despite health warnings from government agencies.

“It’s actually scary -you can’t see things in front of you,” protester Jaivipra told AFP at a rally in Delhi on Sunday calling for politician­s to do more to curb pollution.

Nurses at the demonstrat­ion said they were seeing more people suffering as a result of the smog.

“Patients are coming with more lung and respirator­y diseases, like more (are) affected with asthma,” Reshma C.M. said. - Pollution blame game The conditions sparked a blame game between state and federal politician­s over who was responsibl­e for the conditions, which authoritie­s said Friday reached “emergency” levels.

In a tweet last week, Kejriwal called on the state government­s of neighbouri­ng Punjab and Haryana to take action.

“Delhi has turned into a gas chamber due to smoke from crop burning in neighbouri­ng states,” he tweeted.

Federal Environmen­t Minister Prakash Javadekar accused Kejriwal of politicisi­ng the issue and presenting the two states “in a bad light and as villains”.

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