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'It’s Killing Us,’ Delhi’s Smog-Choked Roads Take Their Toll

Stinging eyes, an unrelenting cough, and chronic lung disease have taken their toll on Bhajan Lal, an auto-rickshaw driver navigating the Indian capital’s chaotic roads and poisonous air, IgbereTV reports.

For the last three decades, Lal carted passengers along bumpy thoroughfares to temples, markets, and offices in New Delhi, working every day through the winter months when a pall of toxic smog settles over the sprawling megacity.

“The pollution causes a lot of problems for my throat,” the 58-year-old told AFP, after a morning spent in the driver’s seat of his motorised three-wheeler.

“My eyes sting… My lungs are affected, which creates breathing problems. Mucus builds up and collects in my chest.”

Delhi is consistently ranked the world’s worst capital for air quality and on its most polluted days, the smog can cut visibility on the roads to barely 50 metres

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