1. Skip to content
  2. Skip to main menu
  3. Skip to more DW sites

Smog poses disease risk to tens of thousands

November 22, 2019

Rights groups called on Lahore to take "urgent action" to prevent a thick smog further engulfing the city of more than 10 million people. Authorities told parents not to send their children to school.

Smog in Lahore
Image: picture-alliance/AP Photo/K.M. Chaudary

Amnesty International is urging global support for a campaign on behalf of residents in Pakistan's eastern Punjab city of Lahore where a thick smog continues to loom over the region.

The UK-based rights group warned Friday that tens of thousands of people are at risk of respiratory disease due to the poor air quality. 

The warning comes a day after Lahore's Air Quality Index skyrocketed to 598. At 300 and above, the air is considered unhealthy. 

Amnesty blamed rising smog levels on the Pakistani government's insufficient response.

"The hazardous air is putting everyone's right to health at risk,'' said Rimmel Mohydin, South Asia Campaigner at Amnesty.

"The issue is so serious that we are calling on our members around the world to write to the Pakistani authorities to tell them to stop downplaying the crisis and take urgent action to protect people's health and lives.''

Lahore's air pollution began to skyrocket to dangerous levels in NovemberImage: Getty Images/AFP/A. Ali

Read moreEU clean air lawsuits may save - and punish - citizens

One of the most polluted cities 

Lahore, one of the country's wealthiest cities and once known as the "city of gardens," has been struggling to regulate air pollution. It is now considered one of the world's most polluted cities. 

Dangerous levels of air contamination have forced many of Lahore's residents to stay at home, with some residents taking to social media, tweeting, "Lahore you're killing me." 

Mohydin said air quality severely declined to unsafe levels in November, with one out of every two days since the beginning of the month having been classified as "hazardous'" by air quality monitors implemented by the Pakistan Air Quality Initiative and the city's US Consulate. She said residents have not had healthy air for a single day in 2019. 

Mohydin explained that the "smog season" in the eastern province typically runs from October to February when poor fuel quality, uncontrolled emissions and crop burning further deteriorate already unhealthy air.

Read more: Opinion: Trump's Paris climate accord exit isn't really a problem

Blame pinned on India 

Naseem-Ur-Rahman Shah, head of the provincial Environment Protection Department in Punjab, said thousands of people were treated this week at hospitals and clinics for respiratory-related diseases including asthma, fever, flu and cough.

While Shah warned people not to expose themselves to the harmful smog and said the government was "taking steps to control air pollution in Punjab," Lahore residents still blamed the government's inadequate measures to control air pollution. 

"I don't expect any action from the government to control toxic air," 56-year-old Uzma Tareen, a local resident, told The Associated Press news agency.

Pakistan's minister for the environment drew criticism last week after denying in a statement that the air quality in Lahore was hazardous. 

Pakistan often blames poor air quality on farmers in India for burning waste in open fields.

"The fast blowing winds brought thick smog from India to Lahore and the international community should pressure India to take
measures for controlling air pollution as it also affects us,'' said Shah.

Air pollution in Pakistan

03:10

This browser does not support the video element.

mvb/sms (AP, dpa)

Every evening at 1830 UTC, DW's editors send out a selection of the day's hard news and quality feature journalism. You can sign up to receive it directly here.

Skip next section Explore more
Skip next section DW's Top Story

DW's Top Story

Skip next section More stories from DW