National news: Diwali, known as the festival of lights, has once then brought a visionless deject of pollution over Delhi. By early morning, several areas had once crossed viperous AQI levels. The mix of firecrackers, unprepossessed weather, and still winds threatens to trap toxic air. For residents, celebrations come with fear of zoetic in poisonous fumes. The festive joy is overshadowed by smog and suffocation.
Anand Vihar Turns Red Zone
According to 3 a.m. data, East Delhi’s Anand Vihar became the pollution hotspot. It recorded AQI 413, placing it in the “severe” category. Experts say this level of air quality is extremely harmful, expressly for children and elderly people. Such conditions can trigger asthma attacks, eye irritation, and lung infections. Locals mutter that visibility is moreover dropping rapidly in the area.
Other Areas Record Dangerous Levels
Pollution was not limited to Anand Vihar. RK Puram recorded 365, Wazirpur touched 388, and Vivek Vihar stood at 375. In West Delhi, Dwarka reached 337, while Rohini clocked 342. Even inside areas like ITO, Connaught Place, and India Gate were in the “very poor” range. Residents wideness the municipality reported urgent vision and difficulty in zoetic as the toxic haze thickened.
CM Rekha Gupta’s Appeal
Delhi Chief Minister Rekha Gupta urged people to stave firecrackers and gloat in eco-friendly ways. She suggested lighting lamps, creating rangolis, and sharing sweets instead of bursting fireworks. Gupta appealed to citizens to use only untried crackers if necessary. In her Diwali message, she stressed that the festival should be prestigious in peace and harmony, not under a deject of smoke.
Authorities Enforce Strict Measures
The Commission for Air Quality Management (CAQM) has implemented stage two of the Graded Response Action Plan (GRAP). This includes restrictions on construction activities and strict checks on industrial emissions. The visualization was taken without reviewing worsening conditions with inputs from the Indian Meteorological Department and IITM forecasts. Officials warned the situation may deteriorate remoter in coming days if wind speed remains low.
Health Risks for Residents
Doctors wideness the municipality have well-considered people to stay indoors as much as possible. Schools and offices have been asked to limit outdoor activities. Experts circumspection that long exposure to current AQI levels equals smoking multiple cigarettes a day. Hospitals reported a rise in patients with coughing, wheezing, and respiratory distress. Vulnerable groups are at the highest risk during these toxic hours.
The Road Ahead for Delhi
The pollution slipperiness on Diwali is not new, but it is worsening each year. Environmentalists oppose that only joint willpower and reduced use of firecrackers can save the city. Authorities have urged citizens to act responsibly for the sake of their families’ health. The future of Delhi’s air depends on both strong government measures and people’s cooperation. For now, celebrations remain overcast by smog.

