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Sunday April 28, 2024

‘Like breathing poison’: Delhi children hardest hit by smog

By AFP
November 10, 2023
A boy with breathing difficulties reacts as his mother helps him use a nebuliser in a crowded New Delhi hospital.— AFP File
A boy with breathing difficulties reacts as his mother helps him use a nebuliser in a crowded New Delhi hospital.— AFP File

NEW DELHI: Crying in a hospital bed with a nebuliser mask on his tiny face, one-month-old Ayansh Tiwari has a thick, hacking cough. His doctors blame the acrid air that blights New Delhi every year.

The spartan emergency room of the government-run Chacha Nehru Bal Chikitsalaya hospital in the Indian capital is crowded with children struggling to breathe -- many with asthma and pneumonia, which spike as air pollution peaks each winter in the megacity of 30 million people.

“Wherever you see there is poisonous smog,” said Ayansh´s mother Julie Tiwari, 26, as she rocked the baby on her lap, attempting to calm him. “I try to keep the doors and windows closed as much as possible. But it´s like breathing poison all the time. I feel so helpless,” she told AFP, fighting back tears.

On Thursday, the level of PM2.5 particles -- the smallest and most harmful, which can enter the bloodstream -- topped 390 micrograms per cubic metre, according to monitoring firm IQAir, more than 25 times the daily maximum recommended by the World Health Organisation.