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Stalemate continues between AAP and BJP over stubble burning

The blame game between the ruling AAP in Delhi and the BJP continued on Monday amid a severe air pollution crisis, with both parties holding stubble burning in states ruled by the other as the cause of the health scare in the national capital. AAP chief spokesperson Priyanka Kakkar alleged in a press conference on […]

The blame game between the ruling AAP in Delhi and the BJP continued on Monday amid a severe air pollution crisis, with both parties holding stubble burning in states ruled by the other as the cause of the health scare in the national capital.
AAP chief spokesperson Priyanka Kakkar alleged in a press conference on Monday that paddy stubble (parali) burning in Haryana was responsible for air pollution in Delhi, and the BJP government in the state did nothing to prevent farm fires.
Hitting back, Delhi BJP president Virendra Sachdeva claimed there were over 3,000 stubble burning incidents in AAP-ruled Punjab on Sunday while Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal was busy with “political tourism” in poll-bound states.
“Kejriwal has turned Delhi into the city of smoke. There were 3,230 incidents of parali burning in Punjab on Sunday alone, but Kejriwal has kept mum over it because his party rules in the state,” Sachdeva charged.
People are choking due to air pollution in Delhi, but Kejriwal’s priority is “political tourism”, he said, adding that immediate steps were needed to combat the crisis.
Sachdeva further alleged that damaged roads, dust, and farm fires in Punjab were the major factors behind the high level of air pollution in the city.
Kakkar, on the other hand, claimed that stubble burning in Haryana’s Sonipat, Panipat, and Rohtak was leading to smoke that was reaching Delhi, but the Khattar government was doing nothing to check it.
“In Haryana, parali is burning 100 km away from Delhi, while stubble is being burnt in Punjab, 500 km away from the national capital,” she said.
She charged that Haryana did not do anything despite getting funds from the Centre to prevent the burning of paddy straw, while Punjab, even without getting funds, reduced stubble burning by 50–67 per cent as compared to last year.
She also alleged that BS III and BS IV buses, industrial units, and the use of diesel generators due to long power cuts in Haryana were also contributing to pollution in Delhi.

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