Anabelle Colaco
12 Nov 2025, 11:16 GMT+10
NEW DELHI, India: A dense grey haze blanketed New Delhi on November 10, choking the city's skyline and sending pollution levels soaring to "severe" levels, and, in a public outcry, driving hundreds of residents onto the streets to demand government action.
By morning, the capital's air quality index reached 344, more than 20 times higher than the World Health Organization's safe limit. Many residents complained of headaches, sore throats, and burning eyes as toxic air gripped one of the world's most polluted cities.
Late on November 9, parents, students, and environmental activists gathered at India Gate, some holding banners reading "I miss breathing." Most wore masks and carried air purifiers or placards calling for immediate action.
"I am here just as a citizen who cares and who is worried about the lack of clean air to breathe," said Meghna, one of the protesters. Police soon confiscated placards and dispersed the crowd, saying the demonstration lacked prior permission.
Each winter, Delhi becomes the epicenter of India's air pollution crisis, and this year's haze has triggered unusual public anger. Many accuse officials of offering short-term fixes while trading blame between state and federal agencies.
"Every year it's the same," said one protester. "They shut down schools, ban construction for a few days, and pretend it's solved."
India has six of the world's ten most polluted cities, according to the Swiss air-monitoring group IQAir, and New Delhi remains the most polluted capital globally. Home to more than 30 million people, the city regularly records hazardous air quality between October and January, when crop-burning in neighboring states combines with vehicle exhaust, factory smoke, and cooler air that traps pollutants close to the ground.
Authorities have temporarily banned construction, restricted diesel generators, and even attempted cloud seeding to induce artificial rain. But critics say these measures do little to address the deeper problem, an overreliance on fossil fuels, weak enforcement, and unchecked urban growth.
Pollution spikes also worsen after Diwali, the Hindu festival of lights, when fireworks add to the toxic mix. Though the government had urged restraint this year, the impact was visible across the city's skyline.
Experts say the only lasting solution lies in cutting emissions and improving public transport, not just imposing bans during smog season.
"Unless long-term strategies are implemented, Delhi's winter air will remain a recurring disaster," said one environmental researcher.
As protesters were forced to disperse, the air hung thick and sour. "We're just asking to breathe," Meghna said quietly. "That shouldn't be too much to ask."
Get a daily dose of Venezuela Star news through our daily email, its complimentary and keeps you fully up to date with world and business news as well.
Publish news of your business, community or sports group, personnel appointments, major event and more by submitting a news release to Venezuela Star.
More InformationLONDON, U.K.: Vodafone is giving shareholders something they haven't seen in nearly a decade: a dividend increase. The British telecoms...
NEW YORK, New York - U.S. stocks were fragmented Tuesday with the Dow Jones rising hundreds of points, while the Nasdaq Composite floundered....
LONDON, United Kingdom: Diageo has chosen former Tesco chief Dave Lewis as its next CEO, ending months of speculation about who would...
HONG KONG: China's bid to attract global tech talent is gaining momentum and drawing comparisons to America's famous H-1B program....
BEIJING/SHANGHAI: After years of regulatory crackdowns, China's internet finance giants are quietly reentering the lending business,...
NEW YORK, New York - Wall Street finished Monday with a powerful rally, driven by a surge in technology stocks that lifted the Nasdaq...
NEW DELHI, India: A dense grey haze blanketed New Delhi on November 10, choking the city's skyline and sending pollution levels soaring...
DUBAI, U.A.E.: U.S. President Donald Trump has been promoting the idea of Saudi Arabia normalizing relations with Israel, but such...
LONDON, U.K.: The BBC's top two executives — Director-General Tim Davie and News CEO Deborah Turness — resigned on November 9 amid...
WASHINGTON, D.C.: The U.S. Senate on November 9 took a significant step toward ending the federal government shutdown, now in its 41st...
WASHINGTON, D.C.: The U.S. Supreme Court privately discussed late this week whether to take up a challenge that seeks to overturn its...
MAE SOT, Thailand: India repatriated the first group of its citizens who fled to Thailand from Myanmar, where they had been working...
