Air, The Silent Killer

Exposure to contaminated air (and water) kills three times as many people as AIDS, tuberculosis and malaria combined, and nearly fifteen times more than war and all forms of violence, according to the Lancet Commission on Air Pollution.

offline
Exposure to contaminated air (and water) kills three times as many people as AIDS, tuberculosis and malaria combined, and nearly fifteen times more than war and all forms of violence, according to the Lancet Commission on Air Pollution.

A breach in our defences

‘We are moving back to Washington this week,’ wrote Gardiner Harris, the New York Times correspondent in India, in an editorial in 2015. It was his goodbye letter to the city that had been his home for three years.

Gardiner and his family were packing up their lives in Delhi because their eight-year-old son had developed full-blown asthma while living in the capital and had been on regular steroids.

‘The high level of pollution from vehicles, dust, smoke and factories, especially during the election campaign when he was travelling around the city, might have caused accumulation of toxins in his body and that required immediate attention,’ Dr Baina Nandakumar, Chief Medical Officer at the Jindal Institute of Nature Cure in Bengaluru, said to the Indian Express in April 2015.

He was speaking about his patient, Arvind Kejriwal, chief minister of Delhi, who had to leave the city and spend ten days in Bengaluru to be cured. Two years later, in November 2017, the situation in Delhi had not improved, it had only become worse. Disgusted, the chief minister famously compared the city to a ‘gas chamber’ – a term which is still used to describe India’s capital city every time pollution makes headlines.

‘There were oxygen cylinders in the change room. It’s not normal for players to suffer in that way while playing the game,’ Sri Lankan cricket coach Nic Pothas told the Guardian in 2017 after a Test match between India and Sri Lanka in Delhi had to be stopped because the Sri Lankan players started vomiting on the field, unable to handle the bad air that hung over the stadium that December morning.

‘If you have the option to live elsewhere, you should not raise children in Delhi,’ warns Sarath Guttikunda, one of India’s top researchers of air pollution. He moved to Goa to protect his two young children fro...

Read more!