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Delhiites urged to accept controversial car ban plan
By Annie BANERJI
New Delhi (AFP) Dec 24, 2015


Smog shuts schools in Bosnia's Sarajevo
Sarajevo (AFP) Dec 24, 2015 - Air pollution forced Bosnian authorities to shut schools in the capital Sarajevo on Thursday, while smog levels also spiked in other parts of the Balkan country due to a lack of rainfall, local officials said.

The air quality index, whose "normal" levels range from 0 to 50, reached 94 in Sarajevo on Thursday, official data showed.

Registered levels had been even higher in recent days, with the index soaring above the dangerous 300 mark and the city literally shrouded in a smog.

Regional authorities in Sarajevo decided to close primary and secondary schools Thursday, they said in a statement, while the city council demanded an early start to the winter holiday, so that children would be spared from being exposed to the smog.

Winter holidays traditionally start later in Bosnia than in western Europe, just ahead of the New Year.

Health authorities urged citizens meanwhile, particularly those with health problems, pregnant women and children, to refrain from going out at all.

Red Cross and non-governmental activists distributed protective masks to people across the city, which is surrounded by mountains that lock in the air especially during dry spells.

Pollution levels were also exacerbated by fumes from heating tens of thousands of homes.

Weather forecasts indicate that smog levels are not expected to improve before January.

Several other Bosnian towns were also hit by smog, especially those with large industrial areas such as Lukavac and Tuzla, where the air pollution index reached 293 and 193 respectively on Thursday.

Delhi's firebrand Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal called on residents of India's capital Thursday to cooperate with his ambitious plans to clean up the toxic air of the world's most polluted city.

His plea came as the city's government gave final details of a trial plan announced this month which will only allow car users to drive on alternate days for the first two weeks of January.

"Pollution is becoming a very serious problem... And it's a problem that all of us need to solve together," Kejriwal said at a press conference at his New Delhi residence.

"We have to make this a movement, a people's movement. We cannot implement this with the fear of punishment," he added.

Under the scheme any cars with odd-numbered licence plates will only be allowed to drive in the capital on odd-numbered dates and those with even-numbered plates on the others.

Traffic police and 10,000 volunteers will monitor cars at checkpoints across the city and violators will be fined 2,000 rupees ($30) -- extremely steep for the average resident.

The government will also add thousands more buses to bolster creaking public transport in the city, where more than 8.5 million vehicles jostle for space and 1,400 new cars are added daily.

It has ordered schools to close saying it needs to co-opt school buses to help people travel to work.

"My family and I are not exempted from anything," the activist-turned-politician said, adding that he and his ministers would carpool.

The ban, which runs from 8:00 am to 8:00 pm, has several exemptions -- it will not apply on Sundays, and exempts dozens including dignitaries, women driving alone or with young children, and motorcycles.

It has met a mixed response, with many looking forward to the novelty of congestion-free roads and clearer skies while others, especially in Delhi's vast commuter belt, complain that getting to work will be impossible.

Sceptics have said Delhiites will deploy the famed Indian skill of "jugaad" -- creating a cheap alternative solution -- by forging number plates or buying second-hand cars.

But Kejriwal's deputy, Manish Sisodia, urged Delhi residents to swallow the scheme as "a bitter pill right now rather than die from breathing this poison".

The Indian capital is ranked as the most polluted globally in a World Health Organization survey of more than 1,600 cities.

The city has been shrouded in a toxic blanket of smog in recent weeks as winter sets in, cutting visibility and pushing PM 2.5 levels more than 10 times over the WHO's recommended safe limit.

These fine particles less than 2.5 micrometres in diameter are linked to higher rates of chronic bronchitis, lung cancer and heart disease as they settle into the lungs and can pass into the bloodstream.

Indian courts have stepped in to tackle the mounting crisis, ordering several steps including a moratorium on large diesel cars in Delhi.


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