Smog dims shine of India’s Diwali festival of lights

(Students put the finishing touches to a 8'x11' (2.4m x 3.3m) rangoli, or mural made out of coloured powders, at a school ahead of Diwali festival celebrations in Ahmedabad October 21, 2011/Amit Dave)
Bharat Prakash has stayed indoors on Diwali day for the past four years to avoid the smog that envelopes Indian cities during the festival, which celebrates the triumph of good over evil with fireworks and small oil-filled clay lamps. As the rest of the country celebrates the Festival of Lights, which falls on Wednesday this year, asthma sufferers like Prakash, 22, will be cooped up at home, dreading the blanket of smoke that worsens the already dire air quality.
“I don’t step out of the house on Diwali nights,” says Prakash, a marketing professional in Pune. Diwali is one of the most imporatant festivals of the Hindu year and is also celebrated by Jains, Sikhs and some Buddhists in India.
In New Delhi, the morning after Diwali always brings a blanket of thick white smog — and the situation is getting worse. A study conducted by the Central Pollution Control Board showed that noise and air pollution levels were higher during Diwali in 2010 than the previous year despite nationwide campaigns against firecrackers.
“It’s a concern that pollution levels go up, noise levels go up, and the doctors in cities have also confirmed that hospital admissions during this time increase, due to symptoms related to pollution-related diseases,” said Anumita Roychowdhury, at the Center for Science and Environment in New Delhi.
“Every year during Diwali, pollution levels are quite high largely because of the firecrackers, but the traffic intensity also goes up during this time.”
Read the full story by Anuja Jaiman here.
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in my town next to bombay we use a lot of candles for the Diwali festival and we are always careful. I encourage people to visit India during this festival. Come to India my beautiful country