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40,633 Sign Up For Delhi's Half Marathon Despite Pollution Levels That Can Cause Lung Disease

Doctors have advised citizens to restrict their outdoor activities and said runners must be made aware of the risks they are taking.
Representative image.
Anushree Fadnavis / Reuters
Representative image.

NEW DELHI ā€”Tens of thousands of runners have signed up for Delhiā€™s half marathon and other races on Sunday, officials said, despite the air quality hitting dangerous levels in one of the most heavily polluted cities in the world.

New Delhiā€™s air quality index was around 300 on Thursday, classified as very poor and meaning prolonged exposure can cause respiratory illness.

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Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal, who has described the city as a ā€œgas chamberā€ in winter, has ordered emergency measures, including restricting the number of private vehicles on the roads under an ā€œodd-evenā€ scheme based on number plates.

Race organisers said pollution was a worry but they would take steps to reduce the impact on runners. Hours ahead of and throughout the race, the course will be sprayed with water.

ā€œThe air quality is a concern and will remain a concern, there is no question about it,ā€ said Vivek Singh, joint managing director of Procam International that conducts the race sponsored by telecom operator Bharti Airtel.

ā€œThe measures that we take for those few hours to give our runners a good experience have worked in the past.ā€

The race has been moved this year to avoid a sharp rise in pollutants during Diwali.

But farmers burning crop stubble in the states north of Delhi have turned the air over Delhi toxic. The forecast for the next few days and into Sunday is ā€œvery poorā€.

A record 40,633 people have signed up for the 21-km, 10-km and a 5-km races. Last year there were 34,916 runners, many of whom wore masks.

A former Olympic gold medallist, Carmelita Jeter of the United States, is the international event ambassador.

Doctors have advised citizens to restrict their outdoor activities and said runners must be made aware of the risks they are taking.

ā€œJust two weeks before the odd-even scheme comes into play, how have the civic authorities allowed more than 30,000 people to expose themselves to toxic air?ā€ asked said Desh Deepak, senior chest physician at the cityā€™s Ram Manohar Lohia Hospital.

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This article exists as part of the online archive for HuffPost India, which closed in 2020. Some features are no longer enabled. If you have questions or concerns about this article, please contact indiasupport@huffpost.com.