When a toxic smog darkened the skies over Delhi last weekend and air pollution peaked, Nabeela Moinuddin and Fareeda - living on opposite sides of the economic divide - were panic-stricken for their families.
Nabeela knew the risks of moving to Delhi with a young family - her youngest, 3-year-old Mehreen, had to be hospitalised with pneumonia during a visit to Delhi in 2017.
So they prepared themselves, air purifiers et al.
Last week, as Delhi's AQI started steadily rising, Nabeela moved quickly.
In three days, they went on to spend Rs 25,000 buying purifiers, plants, masks and an AQI meter.
Then, it went past 900 on Sunday.
“At that moment, we felt very, very helpless,” she said.
Some Nizamuddin East residents packed their bags and took off to places with clear air - people like former Indian cricket Ajay Jadeja.
“But what else can you do? You can’t breathe, so you escape for a few days,” he told @neha_5 by telephone from Goa.
Only his dogs remained.
In Nizamuddin Basti:
For Fareeda & her family, leaving Delhi isn't an option on a monthly household income of Rs 12,000.
She locked up her youngest kids at home and hunkered down. But the pollution streamed in from a large, shutter-less window - the only opening in their house.
When she or the kids step out, they use handkerchiefs and dupattas.
"I find masks very cumbersome,” she told us. The kids don't like them either.
She had got some money plants and wrapped them around the grill of that window, but rats ate them. But Fareeda will try again.
There's not much more her family can do.
“We don’t know how we’ll pay for food every night,” said her husband Abdul Hanif, an electrician with a heart ailment. “How can we think of an air purifier?”
/ENDS.
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AstraZeneca/Covishield accounts for nearly 90% of the 257.5 million vaccine doses administered in India.
So rolling it out efficiently and quickly is key to controlling the pandemic, especially with a dangerous variant already moving around.
In closing, this appears to be further proof that the Indian govt may not be fully listening to scientific advice.
Earlier today, @zebatweets & I reported that the govt missed an early alarm on the B.1.617 variant in March, leading to its rampant spread. reuters.com/business/healt…
The #COVID19 Delta variant is now all over the world.
This is the story of how it all began in a rural Indian district in Feb - and how the Modi govt missed an early alarm, leading to the variant's spread.
- Top govt officials including Dr VK Paul were warned by a veteran public health expert of a possible variant
- Govt officials played down the possibility of a variant in a private meeting & in public
- Large gatherings like elections continued despite the alarm
The variant - B.1.617 - triggered a catastrophic wave of coronavirus cases in India.
Within around 80 days, it went from first ravaging Amravati district in India's Maharashtra to dozens of countries around the world, presenting a setback to global efforts to contain the virus.
@krishnadas56 and I spoke to around a dozen scientists and officials to piece together the events that led up to India's massive second surge in COVID-19 cases.
We found that the govt had some early warnings but didn't act quickly.
The farmers have stopped just ahead of the Outer Ring Road. A number of them want to go straight. A large contingent of police, backed by water cannons and tear gas launchers, are imploring them to go right, as per a planned route.
Stalemate.
Police and protestors have since scuffled, with police firing several rounds of tear gas to unsuccessfully hold the crowds back.
Concrete barricades and containers have been removed by protestors, and a large group has marched on to the ring road.
This is Pendajam, a tiny tribal hamlet in the south Odisha highlands that is home to Reena Jani, a 34-year-old ASHA worker, who was among the first wave of Indians to be vaccinated against COVID-19 earlier this month.
Jani woke up early on Jan 16, finished her chores, checked on a nearby pregnant woman and then sat pillion on a neighbor’s bike to reach the vaccination centre.
This is what her ride to Mathalput Community Health Centre looked ride.