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New Delhi to restore firecracker restriction ahead of Diwali to combat pollution

India's capital will prohibit making use of firecrackers ahead of the Hindu festival of Diwali in November in a quote to control air pollution that reaches dangerous levels every winter season, the regional government said on Monday.

New Delhi, a city of 20 million people, is the world's most contaminated capital, where air quality aggravates as low temperatures and stagnant winds trap emissions throughout the winter season, beginning in October.

The city has prohibited making use of smoke-emitting firecrackers in the past few years, but it has actually been tough to implement regardless of warnings of prison time and fines, specifically throughout Diwali when people burn crackers to celebrate.

Like in 2015, this time likewise a complete restriction is being troubled the production, storage, sale and usage of all kinds of firecrackers so that individuals can be saved from the contamination, Delhi's Environment Minister Gopal Rai stated in a declaration.

Rai's workplace said the ban would stay in location till Jan. 1 and among his assistants said an order executing the ban will be provided in the next couple of days and it will enter result before Diwali, which will be commemorated on Nov. 1.

The celebration generally accompanies a rise in emissions from crop residue burning in Delhi's neighbouring states, which raises the concentration of great particles in the air to several times above the safe limit set by the World Health Company.

Some Hindus see the Diwali firecracker ban as an attempt to interfere with observance of their religion. The government has previously reacted to such criticism by stating that the goal of the ban is to save lives.

It is one of the several mitigation measures taken yearly to manage air pollution in the capital.

(source: Reuters)