The Guardian (USA)

Shadow cast across India as Diwali festival hit by Covid – and smog

- Hannah Ellis-Petersen South Asia correspond­ent

Diwali celebratio­ns in India have taken a more sombre tone this year, as the double spectres of the pandemic and pollution cast a shadow over festivitie­s.

The Hindu festival of light is the most important celebratio­n of the year for many in India and this weekend would usually be marked by raucous parties and fireworks displays.

However, the preparatio­ns and planned celebratio­ns across the country have been unusually muted, particular­ly in the capital, Delhi, where coronaviru­s cases have reached record levels and the city’s annual pollution hit “emergency” levels and enveloped the city in a thick toxic smog.

“We are not celebratin­g like other years, it will be a quiet Diwali for us,” said Sumita Majumdar, a housewife in Delhi. “We will only put out candles and pray for good health. We have not done any shopping for Diwali this year, it is not about celebratio­n but survival.”

WhatsApp messages going viral in India encouraged people to stay at home and light candles for the “Covid warriors who have left us”, and to “offer support and spread “cheer to those who have lost their people and who have suffered losses in jobs and business”.

Delhi recorded 8,600 new coronaviru­s cases on Wednesday, the highest number since the pandemic started, as well as 85 deaths, and hospitals in the city reported that their intensive care units were almost full.

India is the second-worst affected country by the Covid-19 pandemic, with 8.73m cases. Overall, new cases have been declining across the country over the past month but health experts fear Diwali could be a “super-spreader event” that could prompt a second wave, especially if people throng to temples and relatives’ homes as normal.

Gatherings of up to 200 people are still allowed but over the past month, India’s health minister, Harsh Vardhan, has been campaignin­g for people to have a socially distanced Diwali.

At Delhi’s popular and bustling Lajpat Nagar market this week, warnings were broadcast over loudspeake­rs telling Diwali shoppers to wear masks and maintain social distancing.

With evidence showing that air pollution is linked to higher death rates from coronaviru­s and more vulnerabil­ity to the virus, firecracke­rs, highly popular during the festival but also major air pollutants, have been banned in the capital and other cities across

India.

There has been a push towards a “digital Diwali”. In Delhi, prayer ceremonies will be broadcast on television and social media to encourage people to stay at home. In an attempt to stop the use of firecracke­rs during Diwali, the UN environmen­t programme launched a series of augmented reality filters where people could have exploding e-firecracke­rs, known as e-pataakhas, on their Facebook and Instagram posts instead of setting off the real thing.

 ?? Photograph: Rajat Gupta/EPA ?? Heavy smog at Rajpath in Delhi, where there is concern pollution could aggravate the Covid-19 situation.
Photograph: Rajat Gupta/EPA Heavy smog at Rajpath in Delhi, where there is concern pollution could aggravate the Covid-19 situation.
 ?? Singh/AP ?? A woman shopping at Lajpat Nagar market in Delhi earlier this week. Photograph: Rajesh Kumar
Singh/AP A woman shopping at Lajpat Nagar market in Delhi earlier this week. Photograph: Rajesh Kumar

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