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		As Delhi smog hits 'severe' level, city 
		chief under fire after reports he is abroad 
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		 [November 12, 2018] 
		By Neha Dasgupta 
 NEW DELHI (Reuters) - As pollution in 
		India's capital hit "severe" on the air quality scale on Saturday, the 
		New Delhi chief minister came under fire following reports he had left 
		the city for an overseas family trip.
 
 For a second year the chief minister, Arvind Kejriwal, has likened Delhi 
		to a "gas chamber" because of the pollution.
 
 Seasonal burning of crop stubble and smoke from fireworks let off to 
		celebrate the Hindu festival of Diwali on Nov. 7 have aggravated already 
		high smog levels in the past few days from vehicle emissions, industrial 
		gases and construction work.
 
 (Graphic: For a window into Delhi's pollution click https://tmsnrt.rs/2PiM0Ut)
 
 Local television news channels said Kejriwal had left the country on a 
		private family trip to Dubai, triggering a backlash on social media and 
		finger pointing on Twitter by the Delhi arm of India's governing 
		Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), the party of Prime Minister Narendra Modi.
 
		
		 
		
 "Arvind Kejriwal cares about his family so much that he urgently booked 
		tickets and ran away to Dubai with them as soon as Delhi started choking 
		with pollution," said one Twitter user.
 
 A member of Kejriwal's party, the Aam Aadmi (Common Man) Party (AAP), 
		told Reuters that the chief minister was not in the city. He declined to 
		elaborate or be identified because he is not authorized to speak to the 
		media.
 
 A city government spokesman did not respond to telephone calls seeking 
		comment.
 
 Neither the governing party at federal level nor the main opposition are 
		in power in the capital, giving them little incentive to co-operate with 
		city authorities.
 
 Environmental activists say residents need to be more vocal about 
		holding political leaders to account over the pollution.
 
 "Public pressure has to be much sharper and demand compliance. 
		Directions, policies have been issued but stringent implementation is 
		needed," said Anumita Roychowdhury, an executive director at the Centre 
		for Science and Environment, a think-tank.
 
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			A man wearing a protective mask walks amidst smog in the early 
			morning in New Delhi, India, November 8, 2018. REUTERS/Anushree 
			Fadnavis 
            
 
            Still, there is little sign in Delhi that residents are doing much 
			to protect themselves from the smog. Activists say the apparent lack 
			of concern about the pollution gives federal and local politicians 
			the cover they need for failing to adequately address the problem.
 The Environment Pollution (Prevention and Control) Authority has 
			banned all construction activity and ordered use of sprinklers in 
			the city until Nov. 10, among other measures. On Saturday, it 
			indicated the measures would be extended until Monday.
 
 The city government has banned heavy vehicles from entering Delhi 
			until Sunday and it was not clear if that order would be extended. 
			It had also urged drivers to avoid using private diesel-powered 
			vehicles until Saturday, but there has been no ban.
 
 Measures of tiny poisonous particulate matter, or PM 2.5 particles 
			less than 2.5 microns in diameter, reached an average of 401 across 
			Delhi at 1600 IST (1030 GMT), the Central Pollution Control Board (CPCB) 
			said.
 
 That touches the "severe" category between 401-500, defined by the 
			CPCB as bad air that can seriously impact those with existing health 
			conditions, such as asthma, and can affect healthy people.
 
 The capital's pollution hit emergency levels on Thursday, according 
			to the U.S. embassy. It followed Wednesday's Diwali celebrations, 
			when revelers let off fireworks.
 
 (Reporting by Neha Dasgupta; Editing by Martin Howell and Neil 
			Fullick)
 
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