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Plan to clean New Delhi’s polluted air may fizzle before it starts as vehicle rules eased

Anger and alarm are rapidly rising throughout sprawling New Delhi over the air quality that the World Health Organization has ranked the most hazardous on the planet. AFP PHOTO / CHANDAN KHANNA / AFP / Chandan Khanna

NEW DELHI – The Indian capital, gasping and choking under record-high air pollution, announced a grand plan to clean its air. But that plan seems to be fizzling before it starts.

Arvind Kejriwal, the top elected official of the Indian capital, had said last month that private cars will be allowed on New Delhi’s roads only on alternate days from Jan. 1-15, depending on whether their license plates end in an even or an odd number.

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On Thursday, he announced a list of people exempted from that rule: top politicians, judges, police and prison officials, women and sick people.

READ MORE: Mayor of small Italian town bans some pizza-making, blames it for soaring air pollution

The effects of pollution in New Delhi are palpable: grey, overladen skies, difficulty in breathing and the smell of vehicle exhaust that pervades the air.

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