‘I miss breathing’: Delhi protesters demand action on pollution

Citizens protest against what they called the government’s lack of action to combat air pollution in the capital city New Delhi, India, Sunday, Nov. 9, 2025. (AP Photo/Manish Swarup)
Short Url
Updated 09 November 2025
Follow

‘I miss breathing’: Delhi protesters demand action on pollution

  • New Delhi with its sprawling metropolitan region of 30 million residents is regularly ranked among the world’s most polluted capitals
  • Around 3.8 million deaths in India between 2009 and 2019 were linked to air pollution

NEW DELHI: Dozens of protesters rallied in New Delhi on Sunday to demand government action on toxic air, as a thick haze containing dangerous microparticles shrouded the Indian capital.
Parents in the crowd brought their children, who wore masks and waved placards, with one reading: “I miss breathing.”
New Delhi with its sprawling metropolitan region of 30 million residents is regularly ranked among the world’s most polluted capitals.
Acrid smog blankets the skyline each winter, when cooler air traps pollutants close to the ground, creating a deadly mix of emissions from crop burning, factories and heavy traffic.
Levels of PM2.5 — cancer-causing microparticles small enough to enter the bloodstream — sometimes rise to as much as 60 times the UN’s daily health limits.
“Today I am here just as a mother,” said protester Namrata Yadav, who came with her son.
“I am here because I don’t want to become a climate refugee.”
On Sunday, PM2.5 levels around India Gate, the iconic war memorial where protesters had assembled, were more than 13 times the World Health Organization’s recommended daily maximum.
“Year after year, it is the same story but there is no solution,” said Tanvi Kusum, a lawyer who said she had come because she was “frustrated.”
“We have to build pressure so that the government at least takes up the issue seriously.”
Piecemeal government initiatives have failed to make a noticeable impact.
These included partial restrictions on fossil fuel-powered transport and water trucks spraying mist to clear particulate matter from the air.
“Pollution is cutting our lives,” said a young woman who claimed to be “speaking for Delhi” and refused to share her name.
A study in The Lancet Planetary Health last year estimated that 3.8 million deaths in India between 2009 and 2019 were linked to air pollution.
The United Nations children’s agency warns that polluted air puts children at heightened risk of acute respiratory infections.
As the sun set into the smog-covered skyline, the crowd of protesters appeared to swell before police bundled several activists into a bus, seizing their placards and banners, arguing they did not have a permission to protest there.
One of them, half-torn, read: “I just want to breathe.”

 


Trump says he asked Putin not to target Kyiv for 1 week during brutal cold spell

Updated 7 sec ago
Follow

Trump says he asked Putin not to target Kyiv for 1 week during brutal cold spell

  • “I personally asked President Putin not to fire on Kyiv and the cities and towns for a week during this ... extraordinary cold,” Trump said
  • Zelensky, for his part, thanked Trump for his effort and welcomed the “possibility” of a pause

KYIV: US President Donald Trump said Thursday that President Vladimir Putin has agreed not to target the Ukrainian capital and other towns for one week as the region experiences frigid temperatures.
There was no immediate confirmation from the Kremlin that Putin has agreed to such a pause.
Russia has been pounding Ukraine’s critical infrastructure, hoping to wear down public resistance to the war while leaving many around the country having to endure the dead of winter without heat.
“I personally asked President Putin not to fire on Kyiv and the cities and towns for a week during this ... extraordinary cold,” Trump said during a Cabinet meeting at the White House, adding that Putin has “agreed to that.”
Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov was asked earlier Thursday whether a mutual halt on strikes on energy facilities was being discussed between Russia and Ukraine, and he refused to comment on the issue.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky late Wednesday had warned that Moscow was planning another large-scale barrage despite plans for further US-brokered peace talks at the weekend.
Trump said he was pleased that Putin has agreed to the pause. Kyiv, which has grappled with severe power shortages this winter, is forecast to enter a brutally cold stretch starting Friday that is expected to last into next week. Temperatures in some areas will drop to minus 30 degrees Celsius (minus 22 Fahrenheit), the State Emergency Service warned.
“A lot of people said, ‘Don’t waste the call. You’re not going to get that.’” the Republican US president said of his request of Putin. “And he did it. And we’re very happy that they did it.”
Zelensky, for his part, thanked Trump for his effort and welcomed the “possibility” of a pause in Russian military action on Kyiv and beyond. “Power supply is a foundation of life,” Zelensky said in his social media post.
Trump did not say when the call with Putin took place or when the ceasefire would go into effect. The White House did not immediately respond to a query seeking clarity about the scope and timing of the limited pause in the nearly four-year war.
Russia has sought to deny Ukrainian civilians heat and running water over the course of the war, which began with Russia’s full-scale invasion on Feb. 24, 2022. Ukrainian officials describe the strategy as “weaponizing winter.”
Last year was the deadliest for civilians in Ukraine since 2022 as Russia intensified its aerial barrages behind the front line, according to the UN Human Rights Monitoring Mission in the country.
The war killed 2,514 civilians and injured 12,142 in Ukraine — 31 percent higher than in 2024, it said.