Delhi's Residents Choke On The Air They Breath as pollution Levels Reach All-time Highs


The city of Delhi is choking, and there’s no end—or much else—in sight. Although residents of the Indian capital are used to polluted air, particularly in the cooler months, when people light their stoves for heat, this winter it reached a level that stunned even Delhiites. In November, after six days of heavy smog smothered the city, the Indian government declared an emergency, temporarily closing schools, construction sites and coal-fired power stations. The hashtag #MyRightToBreathe trended on Twitter, as citizens called for more government action.

Things had deteriorated quickly after October, when thousands of farmers in the nearby state of Punjab burned straw left over from their rice harvests, with that smoke blowing toward Delhi. At the end of the month, during the Hindu festival of Diwali, residents set off celebratory firecrackers against the advice of the government, making the pollution even worse. The day after Diwali, photojournalist and Delhi resident Zacharie Rabehi says the smog was so dense “I couldn’t see my hand at the end of my arm.”

Quietly, Delhi has surpassed the place we all think of as “smog city”—Beijing. During some days in 2016, the concentration of particles in the air was so high that it was above the measurement limit of some instruments. A recent study from the Health Effects Institute found the number of premature deaths caused by pollution in India has risen by 150 percent over the last 25 years, and according to a 2015 study by the Chittaranjan National Cancer Institute, 4.4 million of Delhi’s schoolchildren have reduced lung capacity and will never recover full use of their lungs.

French photographer Rabehi, whose photographs can be seen below, has lived in India for 10 years, documenting humanitarian crises and social issues. This winter, Rabehi turned his lens on Delhi’s pollution, photographing landfill sites, rivers and roads, all of them blurry in the gray air. Rabehi says he wanted to show “not just the air and the smog, but the water and the impact on people too. I wanted to document the repetition of this problem across the city.”

Nearly a third of Delhi’s pollution is caused by vehicle exhaust from diesel engines, and the rest by road dust or burning biomass in stoves that heat homes. Landfills in Delhi, which act as a substitute for trash disposal, are struggling to deal with the 8,000 tons of waste generated by the city’s 19 million residents each day. Landfills smolder day and night as debris burns, releasing toxic smoke. For his project, Rabehi snuck into the 70-acre Ghazipur landfill on the back of a truck after being denied access by authorities.

He also wanted to capture the effects on the city’s most vital water source, the Yamuna River, a branch of the Ganges that runs through Delhi’s center and is the most polluted waterway in India. Bodies are frequently cremated on the banks of the river, and mourners throw the ashes into the water, along with scarves and plastic offerings—despite signs imploring citizens not to throw anything in. His photographs show the river lined with thick white and blue chemical foam, like the remnants of a giant bubble bath, with plastic and trash floating down it.

Although the government introduced measures in November to cut pollution, including sprinkling water on dusty roads and prohibiting the burning of leaves, the death toll will continue to grow rapidly. Every minute, air pollution kills two people in India, as residents choke on the air they breathe.

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