[Skeptics questioned how the measure would be enforced. The Delhi regional government is run by
the Aam Aadmi Party, and the police come under the federal government and its
Bharatiya Janata Party. Arvind Kejriwal, the Delhi chief minister, has long
clashed with the Delhi police.]
to limit cars on roads in the region to fight pollution.
Credit Tsering Topgyal/Associated Press
|
It was the fourth day of
traffic restrictions imposed by the government of the metropolitan Delhi region, part of a series of measures meant to reduce pollution. The
two-week experiment, which began on Friday, has been derided in many quarters
of Delhi , where having a car and driver is a status
symbol, and rush hour is usually a clamor of horn blowing, triple parking and
bumper-to-bumper traffic.
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Under the policy, private cars are allowed on the
streets on alternate days depending on their final license plate numbers, with
Sundays exempt. It calls for penalties of around $30 for scofflaws, and its
success is to be gauged by daily pollution measurements. In 2014, a World
Health Organization study ranked New
Delhi ’s air quality the worst of nearly 1,600 cities
surveyed.
In a release issued
last week, the Delhi government said that the traffic police and the
divisional commissioner would deploy teams to 120 traffic points and that the
Transport Department would check for overcharging and “misbehavior” by auto
rickshaw drivers.
More than 1,200 drivers were caught violating the policy on
Monday, according to the Press Trust of India, a news
agency.
Skeptics questioned how the measure would be enforced. The Delhi regional government is run by
the Aam Aadmi Party, and the police come under the federal government and its
Bharatiya Janata Party. Arvind Kejriwal, the Delhi chief minister, has long
clashed with the Delhi police.
But perhaps the most entrenched barrier is a Delhi elite used to having drivers
standing by at all times. Some of those citizens, members of the capital’s
upper classes, are up in arms about the change.
Promila Bij, 57, a South Delhi resident, swept into a taxi on
Monday morning — the third she had called after two other companies said they
had no cars. She arrived at work in West Delhi more than an hour late, she
said later in a telephone interview, while her three cars and two drivers were
sitting idle at home: All three have license plates ending in odd numbers,
which were barred from the road on Monday. When she reached her office, where
she works for a nongovernmental organization, she canceled meetings that
regularly take her to the satellite city of Gurgaon and to central Delhi .
“I cannot come because I don’t have my driver or car,” she said.
“If you want to call me snooty, all right, I am, because that is my lifestyle
and that’s how I work.”
“You can’t say, ‘Change your lifestyle’ at the snap of a
finger,” she added.
To accommodate the carless, the government said it would provide
3,000 extra buses. It took out newspaper advertisements, and the chief minister
delivered a folksy radio spot on the measure.
“We are truly overwhelmed by the response we
have received so far,” Mr. Kejriwal told
reporters outside his
home on Friday. “Delhi will show the way to the rest of the country.”
But it is not clear that Delhi ’s experiment will actually
reduce pollution, especially as the rules are riddled with exemptions.
Women are allowed to drive any car any time of day, seen as a
nod to safety in a city where women face dangers on public transit.
Two-wheelers — motorcycles and scooters, which experts say made up the majority
of the nearly nine million vehicles on the road as of March in Delhi — are also exempt. Cars using
compressed natural gas, and those belonging to senior government officials and
judges, can be on the roads any day as well.
Ravinder Singh, a Delhi traffic police constable, said
he had issued seven tickets since Friday, but the machine to issue tickets had
broken in the morning. The excuses he heard from drivers breaking the rules
were similar. Claims of medical emergencies — another exemption — were common.
“If it’s a genuine emergency, we can make it out from the face
and tell if they’re lying,” he said. Out of 10 such excuses, he said he
believed only two were genuine.
“This is New Delhi , where people will use all
kinds of clout,” he said. “Everyone will say they know someone in government.”
Even as the government declared that the policy resulted in
lower levels of particulate matter in the air on Friday compared with the same
day last year, environmental experts cautioned that the effect would be
limited. At noon on Monday, the air quality index measured by the
United States Embassy reached 445, well into the “hazardous” level.
Some Delhi residents approved of the move. Amit Bhandari, a
graphic designer, waited patiently for the Metro in a South Delhi station. He began taking the
Metro last week, in anticipation of the traffic changes, and said he thought
that they should continue.
“We Delhi-ites are into
showoff,” he said. “Bigger cars mean you are in a more elite class. That
culture needs to go.”
Suhasini
Raj contributed reporting.