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No sale of firecrackers in Delhi-NCR, says Supreme Court

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No sale of firecrackers in Delhi-NCR, says Supreme Court

Amit Anand Choudhary| TNN | Updated: Oct 9, 2017, 14:06 IST


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NEW DELHI: It will be a cacophony- and smoke-free Diwali this year+ in Delhi and in the National Capital Region (NCR) thanks to the Supreme Court (SC) which on Monday banned the sale of fireworksahead of the annual festival on October 19.

While the SC had issued a similar ban in the NCR region last year, it didn't have the opportunity to observe the impact on pollution levels+ , it said. Therefore it also ordered that a relevant agency compute the impact of a noise-and smoke-free festival this year.

The SC simultaneously suspended all licenses issued by the Delhi Police to shopkeepers that allowed them to sell fireworks.

The SC allowed the sale of firecrackers to resume after November 1 this year.

https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com...-in-delhi-ncr-region/articleshow/61001644.cms
 
To the Hindus : This Diwali, light a diya and weep
113343cf969b94eb402c5e89dea2498a

Bychaiwallah
Posted on October 9, 2017


Dahi Handi, Jallikattu, and now Diwali.



Of course.

Don’t question it. Don’t speak against it. Don’t even dare to raise an eyebrow. Better keep your eyes closed and head hanging downwards.

Don’t utter a word of protest.

Be silent. They can ban the sound of our voice, but can they ban silence?

They can ban lights. But can they ban the darkness?

Who knows?

Be silent and light a diya. And remember. Remember the thousand years of Hindus who lived before you on this very land. They were born on this land where their ancestors had lived for thousands of years before them.

But they were told that this land isn’t theirs. For hundreds of years, they paid jizya to live upon it. From Mathura and Kashi to Ayodhya and Somnath, their temples were destroyed. They lived on with only the memories.

Then missionaries came to the impoverished Hindus.

Light your diya and try to feel the inner torment of the Hindu who had to convert for a bag of rice. Hunger is a horrible thing.


Then partition happened. We lost most of Punjab, most of Bengal and all of Sind forever. Another undeclared partition happened in the early 90s in Kashmir when even more Hindus became refugees in their own land. Today, the Hindus of Western Uttar Pradesh, of many parts of Assam, Kerala and Bengal stand one generation away from meeting the same fate.

What is there for Hindus to celebrate on Diwali, after all?

Good that they banned it.

Today is not hundreds of years ago. If a majority Hindu population in a democratic country cannot guarantee for themselves the minimum right to cultural existence, whose fault is it?

Stop blaming others. And for god’s sake, don’t go out there on Twitter or Facebook and troll the triumphant seculars in your frustration. They are the only ones with a right to celebrate this Diwali. They have won another famous victory over the non-believers.

Do something meaningful this Diwali. Go out and embrace your Hindu neighbor from another caste or region. Go speak to the Tamil brothers and sisters who can’t celebrate Jallikattu, your Marathi brothers and sisters who can’t celebrate Dahi Handi and your Bengali brothers and sisters who are at the mercy of Muharram to dictate their Durga Puja calendar.

“Your struggle is my struggle.”

Tell them.

Light a lamp and think of why the Hindus have seen the misfortunes they have for a thousand years. And if they ban even that, light a lamp in your heart. Only you can banish your inner darkness and they cannot take your inner light away.
 
Interesting how they ban our celebrations due to concerns of pollution but don’t ban other people’s
 
this is the reality of Hindu Rashtra that in the capital one cant celebrate one of the most important Hindu Festivals
 
Delhiites and Bengali Hindus are a bunch of sissies!
 
Delhiites and Bengali Hindus are a bunch of sissies!

Doc I don't expect this from you

this is the reality of Hindu Rashtra that in the capital one cant celebrate one of the most important Hindu Festivals

Guyz It's always hell like situation at Diwali and feels like a smoking chamber inside our houses.
I am a Delhiite and not a libtard and I think It's a good decision in the benefit of us Delhiites.
 
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Please Ban Diwali in Delhi and if possible in rest of India ...

A community which could not provide justice to Lord Ram in Ram Janmabhoomi even after having a Hindu Nationalist government in UP & Centre , dont deserve to celebrate Diwali in Rams name...

Lord Ram who traveled thousands of kilometer to defeat Ravan in lanka has no place in his own Birth place in Ayodhya ...

Hindus dont deserve Diwali... SC just killed one of the Rituals of Hindu Zombies...
 
Please Ban Diwali in Delhi and if possible in rest of India ...

A community which could not provide justice to Lord Ram in Ram Janmabhoomi even after having a Hindu Nationalist government in UP & Centre , dont deserve to celebrate Diwali in Rams name...

Lord Ram who traveled thousands of kilometer to defeat Ravan in lanka has no place in his own Birth place in Ayodhya ...

Hindus dont deserve Diwali... SC just killed one of the Rituals of Hindu Zombies...

Nair Saab you are being unnecessary emotional. This ban has nothing to do with Ram janambhumi or banning Hinduism but to provide us Delhiites a chance to enjoy diwali a more healthy way. You can only guess the kind of condition we have to go through during Diwali.

I have a question for those who are not from Delhi. Do we Delhiites not deserve to breathe a little better? You want to take out your grudge at the expense of our health.

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I kinda support this decision from supreme court coz Delhi turned into a gas chamber on and after diwali. Thank god this diwali will be noiseless and smokeless.
 
Better if the courts made an appeal.

I was all for cracker less Diwali but from last year, it will be crackers all the time.

Hindus can't be held at ransom for all things wrong while others get a wide passé.
 
Nair Saab you are being unnecessary emotional. This ban has nothing to do with Ram janambhumi or banning Hinduism but to provide us Delhiites a chance to enjoy diwali a more healthy way. You can only guess the kind of condition we have to go through during Diwali.

I have a question for those who are not from Delhi. Do we Delhiites not deserve to breathe a little better? You want to take out your grudge at the expense of our health.

airpollution_050515080041.jpg

Why shaming Hindus for alleged pollution on Diwali is completely misplaced
eeb6dbbf9c5d4cc099fca28af35c2960

Bylordwalrus
Posted on October 7, 2017


It is that time of the year when all Hindus are shamed for celebrating one of their most important festivals – Diwali. Apart from lights, the festival is celebrated with fireworks. The common point of accusation against the Hindus is that the festival causes pollution, and serious harm to health of kids and adults alike. Plus we are also reminded of animals getting disturbed by loud noises and being hazardous to birds.

While smoke is an issue on Diwali day, let us take stock of the facts about pollution – and Diwali’s contribution to it. There are few threads in this problem:

  • The overall pollution levels and the source thereof
  • The persistence of firecracker pollution
  • The economics of fireworks in the recent years.
A Greenpeace report claims that all around the year, the Indian metropolis are uninhabitable with respect to air quality. Particularly Delhi, has the distinction of being the most polluted city in the world. Average year round air pollutant levels in Delhi were more than 5 times the safe levels as specified by India and were 10 times higher of that as specified by WHO.

The report identified construction and vehicular traffic to be the two largest contributors of pollution. The third largest contributor was practice of burning paddy husk in nearby states. While such a detailed analysis has not been done for other cities, anecdotal evidence suggests that construction dust may be the biggest culprit, when it comes to air pollution.

Besides construction dust and vehicular pollution, bad infrastructure (as in bad roads) creates suspended particular matter that are effective respiratory pollutants. This is particularly true of metros where civil amenities are more of a wish than a reality. From the above points, it is clear that majority of the pollution in our cities is a persistent year round issue and is not singularly caused during Diwali.

There was a research paper published by IIT-Kanpur in 2016, which studies the issue of pollution and its causes in great detail; in and around the National Capital Region. One particular figure in this report is educative. The figure has been reproduced below:


The time series graph shows the pollution levels in Delhi during the month of November (year) 2013. The first data point is Diwali day – and one does see that the pollutant levels were much higher than the mean [red and blue dotted lines]. What is interesting however, are the pollution level spikes on the 5th of November, on the 9th and 11th, and on 21 through 23rd.

In fact, the pollution levels on the 23rd of November are far higher than on Diwali day. One may argue that the Diwali pollution persists for three weeks, but the data falsifies such a hypothesis. In fact, we find that the pollutant level on Diwali day falls well below the mean levels by the next day. Furthermore, the median pollutant levels across the month also seem to be well below mean levels. These two data together suggests that the pollution caused by Diwali is extremely short-lived (less than 24 hrs), and is no worse than the usual sporadic spikes of pollutants that are observed in Delhi.

Another aspect of Diwali that gets condemned is the noise pollution. While firecrackers used to be noisy (upto 140 dB) in the past, continuous revisions in acceptable noise levels have brought down the overall noise levels to less than 100 dB – and that was the maximum noise by a firecracker. In fact, the overall noise levels across several cities were measured to be between 60 dB and 90 dB (far lesser than the 100 dB of the noisiest cracker). Compare this with a typical noise level in a city junction: honking creates noise in excess of 100 dB.

A look at the differential noise between a normal day and Diwali noises shows that in many places, the differences are marginal. In fact, in some cities, the differences are so marginal that one may consider it to be well within expected variation.

This figure is from a Central Pollution Control Board study on pollution during Diwali across India (2014). Sadly, this report doesn’t provide confidence intervals for the noise levels; nor does it provide any P-values for the differences in noise between normal and Diwali day. What is clear, is that Diwali is likely to be as noisy as any normal working day in Indian cities:



A statistical test for Bangalore for Normal and Diwali days (screen shot below) shows that the mean difference in noise between a normal and festival day in the city is barely 2 dB. In other words, the difference is negligible. Diwali doesn’t create any extra-ordinary noise pollution than an normal day
Last but not least, we come to the question of economics. Several reports such as this one point out that fire cracker sales have been falling drastically, on an annual basis. This particular report cites a 20% reduction YoY in sales for five consecutive years. Such drastic reduction in fire cracker sales would mean at least a halving of total sales (taking a base line of 100 INR, -20% CAGR for 5 years leaves us with 32 INR – or a 68% reduction).

In one particular year, 2015-2016, the fall was 25%. Yet, some newspaper reports claimed a 40% increase in pollution on Diwali due to firecrackers. This doesn’t compute: how can one cut down firecracker purchase by almost 70%, and still end up with 40% increased smoke?

Does it mean that firecrackers are creating 3 times as much smoke as before? While it is “possible”, it is not probable. And the jury will be out on this one until specific studies are done. On the other hand, given the first graph we saw – one could argue that majority of the pollution is due to other causes, and Diwali smoke only marginally adds to it. This seems to be the more likely scenario – at least for Delhi.

In summary, pollution increase during Diwali – of both the air, and noise, is likely marginal, and more importantly, extremely temporary in nature. Vilification of both the festival and those who celebrate it on environmental grounds, seems like vested hatred than anything else.
 
Blanket Banning stuff in the last minute , is that judge high ? Vendors would have invested millions to sell them. They should have given 1 year notice , this is demo all over again.
 
Darn 1 day in fact 4 hours a year kids bursting crackers on Diwali is the primary reason for Delhi's pollution??? The pollution has gone inside the head of judges I guess.
 

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