The Herald (South Africa)

Toxic smog shuts Delhi schools

Doctors warn of major health emergency as pollution levels soar in north India, Pakistan

- Annie Banerji

DELHI authoritie­s ordered all schools to shut yesterday after choking smog descended on north India and Pakistan, with pollution levels in the city 40 times the World Health Organisati­on’s safe limit. Levels of PM 2.5, the microscopi­c particles that are the most damaging to health, reached more than 1 000 micrograms per m³ in the Indian capital yesterday, according to US embassy measuremen­ts.

That is 40 times the WHO safe maximum of 25 over a 24-hour period, and 100 times its upper limit for long-term exposure.

With Indian doctors warning of a public health emergency, the Delhi government ordered all schools in the city to close until Sunday – citing the threat to the health of an estimated five million pupils in the capital.

Dr Arvind Kumar said the smog had made the city unfit for human habitation.

“The kind of toxin levels out there, you are affecting your brain, your heart, your lungs, every part of your body and it is causing irreparabl­e damage,” Kumar, chairman of the Centre for Chest Surgery at the Sri Ganga Ram Hospital in Delhi, said.

Pollution regularly spikes in the region before the onset of winter as farmers set alight their fields to burn the post-harvest crop stubble -- a practice that remains widespread despite an official ban.

Cooler air also traps pollutants from local industry, coal-fired power plants and vehicles near the ground and prevents them dispersing into the atmosphere, a phenomenon known as inversion.

A report in the Lancet medical journal last month said pollution had claimed as many as 2.5 million lives in India in 2015, the highest in the world.

In Pakistan’s second largest city, Lahore, flights were cancelled, school times pushed back and hospitals overwhelme­d with patients.

At Lahore’s Mayo Hospital, elderly patients wearing oxygen masks and lying on stretchers crammed the corridors awaiting treatment.

Their numbers had quadrupled in recent days, with patients flocking to the facility due to eye problems, respirator­y infections and asthma, Dr Irshad Hussain said.

No official air quality data was available but the informal PakAirQual­ity network, which publishes hourly air reports on Twitter, said the concentrat­ion of PM 2.5 in the city’s air had reached 757.

Pakistan’s Punjab province, of which Lahore is the capital, pushed back opening times for schools to 9am to shield children from the worst of the early- morning smog and shut down 180 factories.

Authoritie­s in Delhi have closed power plants temporaril­y and experiment­ed with taking some cars off the road since 2014, when it was named the world’s most polluted major city in a WHO survey.

But the efforts have so far had little effect. “We knew it was coming, yet nothing was done to avoid a repeat,” India director of the charity Clean Air Asia, Prarthana Borah, said.

“Unless air pollution is made a priority by the national government, nothing will work. It is not about a particular geographic area. This problem is borderless and affects us all.”

With dense smog shrouding the roads, many pedestrian­s and bikers wore masks or covered their mouths with handkerchi­efs and scarves.

But there were warnings of even worse to come if changing weather conditions brought more smoke from neighbouri­ng farming areas into Delhi.

Firecracke­rs set off to celebrate last month’s Diwali festival of lights in the city have added to the toxic mix.

On Tuesday, the Environmen­t Pollution Authority ordered the closure of dust-spewing brick kilns and an increase in parking fees to encourage the use of public transport.

“In terms of air pollution, things are expected to get much worse in the coming days,” Environmen­t Pollution Authority head Bhure Lal said.

We knew it was coming, yet nothing was done to avoid a repeat

 ?? Picture: AFP ?? DANGEROUS SMOG: Indian pupils walk home amid heavy smog in New Delhi
Picture: AFP DANGEROUS SMOG: Indian pupils walk home amid heavy smog in New Delhi

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