ARUN SANKARAFP
India's capital, New Delhi, was wreathed in poisonous smog Friday. Air pollution worsened after a fireworks ban was widely flouted for raucous celebrations of the Hindu festival of lights, Diwali.
More than 30 million people live in New Delhi's traffic-clogged streets, which are regularly ranked among the most polluted urban areas on the planet.
The city is blanketed in cancer-causing acrid smog each year, primarily blamed on stubble burning by farmers in neighbouring regions to clear their fields for ploughing and factories and traffic fumes.
But air worsened Friday after a thunderous night of firecrackers lit as part of Diwali celebrations, despite city authorities banning their sale and use last month.
City police had seized nearly two tonnes of fireworks before Diwali, but the crackers remained readily available for sale in neighbouring states.
Many residents celebrated at home, holding a family meal and lighting small candles praising the Hindu goddess Lakshmi, symbolising the victory of light over darkness.
Others launched fireworks rockets and booming crackers, rocking the densely packed city throughout the night.
Police are often reluctant to act against violators, given the strong religious sentiments attached to the crackers by Hindu devotees.
Critics say arguments between rival politicians heading neighbouring states and between central and state-level authorities have compounded the problem.
India's Supreme Court last month ruled that clean air is a fundamental human right and ordered both the central government and state-level authorities to take action.
"Delhi's toxic air is killing us softly with its smog," the Times of India wrote in an editorial last week, as the winter pollution returned.
"It is nothing new, but what doesn't cease to amaze, year after year, is the state's stilted response."
Levels of fine particulate matter—dangerous microparticles known as PM2.5 pollutants that enter the bloodstream through the lungs—surged to more than 23 times the World Health Organization recommended daily maximum.
Soon after dawn, pollutant levels topped 345 micrograms per cubic metre, according to monitoring firm IQAir, which listed air in the sprawling megacity as "hazardous".
It listed New Delhi as the worst in the world, just above smoke-choked Lahore in neighbouring Pakistan, 400 kilometres (250 miles) to the northeast.
The New Delhi government has previously sought to cut pollution by restricting vehicle traffic, including a scheme that only allowed cars with odd or even number licence plates to travel on alternate days.
Authorities have also imposed seasonal bans on construction work and on diesel-powered vehicles from entering the city.
© Agence France-Presse