The response at Ghazipur was not much. However, the Bharat bandh was total in states like Punjab, Haryana, Kerala and Bihar, according to SKM. All kinds of institutions, markets and transport were closed in these states from 6 AM to 4 PM.
A group of 17 farmers began an indefinite zameen Samadhi in Lone town in Uttar Pradesh’s Ghaziabad district on September 15, by digging trenches and threatening to stay put until their demands are met. The farmers seek a fourfold increase in compensation for the land they had sold to the state’s housing board in 2010, in accordance with the Land Acquisition, Rehabilitation and Resettlement Act that came into effect three years after this deal was made. They also demand a repeal of the Union government’s three new farm laws related to agricultural marketing reforms and stocking of essential commodities.
A group of 17 farmers began an indefinite zameen Samadhi in Lone town in Uttar Pradesh’s Ghaziabad district on September 15, by digging trenches and threatening to stay put until their demands are met. The farmers seek a fourfold increase in compensation for the land they had sold to the state’s housing board in 2010, in accordance with the Land Acquisition, Rehabilitation and Resettlement Act that came into effect three years after this deal was made. They also demand a repeal of the Union government’s three new farm laws related to agricultural marketing reforms and stocking of essential commodities.
A group of 17 farmers began an indefinite zameen Samadhi in Lone town in Uttar Pradesh’s Ghaziabad district on September 15, by digging trenches and threatening to stay put until their demands are met. The farmers seek a fourfold increase in compensation for the land they had sold to the state’s housing board in 2010, in accordance with the Land Acquisition, Rehabilitation and Resettlement Act that came into effect three years after this deal was made. They also demand a repeal of the Union government’s three new farm laws related to agricultural marketing reforms and stocking of essential commodities.
A group of 17 farmers began an indefinite zameen Samadhi in Lone town in Uttar Pradesh’s Ghaziabad district on September 15, by digging trenches and threatening to stay put until their demands are met. The farmers seek a fourfold increase in compensation for the land they had sold to the state’s housing board in 2010, in accordance with the Land Acquisition, Rehabilitation and Resettlement Act that came into effect three years after this deal was made. They also demand a repeal of the Union government’s three new farm laws related to agricultural marketing reforms and stocking of essential commodities.
A group of 17 farmers began an indefinite zameen Samadhi in Lone town in Uttar Pradesh’s Ghaziabad district on September 15, by digging trenches and threatening to stay put until their demands are met. The farmers seek a fourfold increase in compensation for the land they had sold to the state’s housing board in 2010, in accordance with the Land Acquisition, Rehabilitation and Resettlement Act that came into effect three years after this deal was made. They also demand a repeal of the Union government’s three new farm laws related to agricultural marketing reforms and stocking of essential commodities.
A group of 17 farmers began an indefinite zameen Samadhi in Lone town in Uttar Pradesh’s Ghaziabad district on September 15, by digging trenches and threatening to stay put until their demands are met. The farmers seek a fourfold increase in compensation for the land they had sold to the state’s housing board in 2010, in accordance with the Land Acquisition, Rehabilitation and Resettlement Act that came into effect three years after this deal was made. They also demand a repeal of the Union government’s three new farm laws related to agricultural marketing reforms and stocking of essential commodities.
A group of 17 farmers began an indefinite zameen Samadhi in Lone town in Uttar Pradesh’s Ghaziabad district on September 15, by digging trenches and threatening to stay put until their demands are met. The farmers seek a fourfold increase in compensation for the land they had sold to the state’s housing board in 2010, in accordance with the Land Acquisition, Rehabilitation and Resettlement Act that came into effect three years after this deal was made. They also demand a repeal of the Union government’s three new farm laws related to agricultural marketing reforms and stocking of essential commodities.
A group of 17 farmers began an indefinite zameen Samadhi in Lone town in Uttar Pradesh’s Ghaziabad district on September 15, by digging trenches and threatening to stay put until their demands are met. The farmers seek a fourfold increase in compensation for the land they had sold to the state’s housing board in 2010, in accordance with the Land Acquisition, Rehabilitation and Resettlement Act that came into effect three years after this deal was made. They also demand a repeal of the Union government’s three new farm laws related to agricultural marketing reforms and stocking of essential commodities.
The situation had begun to worsen on Diwali day itself. At around 4 pm in the evening November 4, Delhi had an Air Quality Index (AQI) of 382. The CPCB’s Central Control Room recorded Particulate Matter (PM)2.5 levels in Delhi-NCR to be 309 microgram per cubic metre (µg / m³) at 11.30 pm November 4. PM10 levels were recorded to be 500 µg / m³ at 3.30 am. Here, commuters drive on National Highway 24 near Sarai Kale Khan, Delhi.
Despite the ominous signs building up in the days leading to Diwali – drop in temperature, change in wind direction and stubble burning in states to the north, pollution monitors did not put in place arrangements in accordance with emergency conditions. Here, vehicles travel through smog on the Nizamuddin Bridge over the Yamuna in Delhi.
Despite the ominous signs building up in the days leading to Diwali – drop in temperature, change in wind direction and stubble burning in states to the north, pollution monitors did not put in place arrangements in accordance with emergency conditions. Here, vehicles travel through smog on the Nizamuddin Bridge over the Yamuna in Delhi.
Air quality will be severe November 5 and 6, according to forecasts. It will start to improve November 7, according to the Indian Institute of Tropical Meteorology, Pune. Here, a tanker sprinkles water on a road in Anand Vihar, Delhi to reduce dust.
Delhi and its surrounding cities and towns woke up to a smoggy and hazy morning November 5, a day after the national capital celebrated Diwali with almost pre-pandemic like fervour. Here, a Metro train plies over the Noida-Akshardham Link Road at Mayur Vihar Phase 1, Delhi.
Particulate Matter (PM)2.5 in Delhi and the National Capital Region (NCR) at 10.34 am November 5 was seven times the average level of 60 microgram per cubic metre (µg/m³) at 417 µg/m³. On the other hand, PM10 was six times its average level of 100 µg/m³ at 598 µg/m³. Here, a water tank is silhouetted against the Ghazipur landfill in Delhi.