Contemporary politics,local and international current affairs, science, music and extracts from the Queensland Newspaper "THE WORKER" documenting the proud history of the Labour Movement.
MAHATMA GANDHI ~ Truth never damages a cause that is just.
Wednesday, 8 November 2017
Delhi doctors declare pollution emergency as smog chokes city
A public health emergency has been declared by doctors in Delhi as
air quality in the world’s most polluted capital city plunged to levels
likened to smoking at least 50 cigarettes in a single day.
Slow winds and colder temperatures have been blamed for a surge in
airborne pollutants beyond what instruments in the city could measure
with some recording an Air Quality Index (AQI) maximum of 999.
The Indian Medical Association said the country’s capital was
suffering a health emergency and called for an upcoming half-marathon to
be cancelled to avoid “disastrous health consequences”.
Residents were warned to avoid leaving their homes as smog enveloped
streets and landmarks on Tuesday, sparking road, rail and airport delays
and renewed calls for Indian state and federal governments to act.
The Delhi chief minister, Arvind Kejriwal, said the city was a “gas
chamber” as his government met on Tuesday afternoon to consider a
response to the crisis. Primary schools, already asked to keep students
indoors, will be shut on Wednesday and possibly longer if the poor
conditions persist.
Belgium’s King Philippe inspects a military guard of
honour at the Indian presidential palace in Delhi on Tuesday.
Photograph: Manish Swarup/AP
Most dangerous to health are concentrations of fine pollutants
smaller than 2.5 micro-metres – tiny enough to evade the body’s natural
filters and permeate the blood-brain barrier.
Tests by Greenpeace have shown these fine pollutants – called PM2.5 –
can include carcinogenic chemicals such as lead, arsenic, cadmium and
mercury. Levels of PM2.5 in Delhi on Tuesday reached 710 micrograms per
cubic metre, more than 11 times the World Health Organisation’s safe
limit.
“It has terrible effects on every part of your body,” said Dr Arvind
Kumar, the chest surgery chairman at Sir Ganga Ram hospital, who
compared the 999 AQI level recorded in the RK Puram area to smoking 50
cigarettes in a day. “ICUs are full of pneumonia patients. Lots of my
patients are coming with coughs today. They are breathless.
“It can precipitate an acute asthma attack and in the long run it will increase their risk of lung cancer,” he said.
Delhi smog declared public health emergency – video
Those who work outside – such as the city’s fleet of rickshaw pullers
– are hardest hit. Vikas Yadav, an immigrant from Bihar state, said he
used to welcome the colder months when the threat from disease-carrying
mosquitoes subsides.
Now, “my eyes get a burning sensation”, he said. “I fell sick last
year. I don’t know whether it was from the air but I felt breathless and
my eyes were itching. Doctors told me not to work early morning during
winters.”
The smog was unsparing of Delhi’s wealthier set and its community of
expatriate workers, many of whom gathered on Tuesday morning on the
lawns of the Australian high commission for an annual champagne
breakfast to celebrate the Melbourne Cup horse race.
“It was like being in Europe in the middle of winter on a misty
morning,” said one reveller, Elizabeth Pennell, a lawyer for an
international fund. “It would have been romantic had the mist not been
PM2.5.” The crowd paired their race-day dresses and suits with pollution
masks but Pennell said the foul air failed to dampen the mood. “You tuck
up your children inside where the air is purified and for these few
hours you risk your health to let your hair down,” she said.
“And then you can go back and lock yourself inside your apartment and breathe clean air – unlike most Indians.”
Delhi’s air quality is extremely poor for most of the year due to
road dust, open fires, vehicle exhaust fumes, industrial emissions and
the burning of crop residues in neighbouring states.
But conditions worsen in winter months when slow winds and cool temperatures trap pollutants closer to the ground.
As awareness of the problem in Delhi has grown, various methods have
been tried to clear the atmosphere including shutting down a local
coal-fired power station, traffic rationing and banning firecrackers
during Diwali, the annual Hindu festival.
But any lasting solution would need to simultaneously tackle the
myriad sources of pollution and involve dozens of state and municipal
governments in a country where law enforcement is notoriously patchy.
Though Delhi gets most attention, toxic air afflicts the entire north
Indian plain, including parts of Pakistan. A study last year found the
holy city of Varanasi had among the worst air in the country.
Airtel, the leading sponsor of the upcoming Delhi half-marathon,
urged the city government to ensure the safety of runners, indicating
that it may pull out of the event next year.
“Air pollution poses serious health risks and it is important that
these concerns are addressed urgently and appropriately by the
authorities for Airtel to continue associating with the event next year
and beyond,” it said in a statement.
The World Health Organisation in 2014 classed Delhi as the world’s
most polluted capital, with air quality levels worse than Beijing. A 2015 study showed about half the Indian capital’s 4.4 million schoolchildren had compromised lung capacity and would never totally recover.
No comments:
Post a Comment