Germany's Chancellor Angela Merkel urged greater efforts to clean up New Delhi's toxic air as she pledged one billion euros to help Indian cities switch to green transport.
Merkel
became a rare foreign leader to speak out on India's smog crisis after being
exposed to the capital's air on Friday, when authorities said the pollution had
reached "emergency" levels.
Schools
were ordered closed until Tuesday and all construction halted, while Delhi
authorities started distributing millions of anti-pollution masks to children.
The same
day, Merkel went on a ceremonial parade in the city with Prime Minister
Narendra Modi on Friday as the smog intensified.
Neither
leader wore masks despite authorities telling residents to stay indoors to
avoid the haze.
Merkel said
that Germany would spend one billion euros on "green" urban transport
projects in India over the next five years, including 200 million euros to
replace diesel buses in Tamil Nadu state.
"These
diesel buses are to be replaced by electric buses and anyone who saw the pollution
in Delhi yesterday would find very good arguments for replacing even more of
these buses," Merkel said in the widely reported speech.
Much of the
new peak in the most dangerous PM 2.5 pollutants -- particulates smaller than
2.5 microns that get into the lungs and bloodstream -- has been blamed on fires
lit by farmers to burn off wheat crop residues outside of the capital.
Higher
winds improved air quality on Saturday but pollution remained
"severe", according to government monitors.
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Some Bangladesh players and bowling coach Daniel Vettori trained in masks at the Arun Jaitley stadium where the Twenty20 match is to be played (AFP Photo/STR) |
Cricket
match
The city
will be under a new spotlight on Sunday when India play Bangladesh in a cricket
international.
The two
teams have insisted they will go ahead with the match despite the pollution
threat.
Some
Bangladesh players and bowling coach Daniel Vettori trained in masks at the
Arun Jaitley stadium, where the Twenty20 match is to be played.
Authorities
have ordered trees in and around the stadium to be sprayed with water to
collect dust.
They have
also set up special patrols to stop construction work and garbage burning.
Bangladesh
captain Mahmudullah Riyad said the team had spoken about the pollution dangers
but there was little they could do.
"When
we came here there was smog, we all know, but the players have practiced for
last three days, trying to adapt to the conditions." he said.
"It's
not within our control, we have to focus on our cricket."
Delhi has
faced a mounting pollution crisis over the past decade.
Fourteen
Indian cities including the capital are among the world's top 15 most polluted
cities, according to the United Nations.
According
to one study, smog kills a million Indians prematurely every year.
India's top court has ordered a complete halt to stubble burning around Delhi, a major contributor to lethal smog that on Tuesday kept the metropolis of 20 million people choking in air rated "very poor" https://t.co/DBnxgKI0t2 #DelhiAirQuality pic.twitter.com/gXUDdr6XHI— AFP news agency (@AFP) 5 november 2019
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