Violators offered roses

January 02, 2016 12:00 am | Updated September 22, 2016 09:15 pm IST - NEW DELHI:

Civil Defence personnel seen holding placards near India Gate on Friday.— Photo: R. V. Moorthy

Civil Defence personnel seen holding placards near India Gate on Friday.— Photo: R. V. Moorthy

‘Gandhigiri’ was on display at 200 locations in the city with civil defence volunteers offering roses to those violating odd-even rules implemented for 15 days from Friday to bring down pollution level in the national Capital.

The Delhi government had deployed around 10,000 volunteers with rose stems in their hands across the national Capital to request violators to follow odd-even rules, following the ‘Gandhigiri’ route.

An official said that around 200 volunteers have been deployed along with traffic cops and sub-divisional magistrates in each Assembly segment of the national Capital at major red rights.

“There are nine districts in Delhi and each district administration has bought roses stems on its own. The flower have been given for civil defence volunteers who will offer the same to those violating the odd-even rules,” said a senior government official.

The official said that most people, who wanted to ply their vehicles on even-numbered car on Friday, relented when they were greeted with roses. Civil defence volunteers stand at traffic halts and they also made violators of odd-even scheme understand the impact of pollution on them and their children.

The ambitious odd-even scheme, a first such intervention in the country to combat spiraling air pollution, got off to a decent start on new year with volume of cars on the city roads coming down significantly amid deployment of thousands of policemen and and moderately augmented public transport.

As the clock struck eight this morning, the vehicular restriction policy came into effect with thousands of volunteers carrying roses also taking to the streets to assist traffic police in enforcing the pilot plan that will stay in force till January 15. — PTI

Around 200 volunteers had been deployed along with traffic cops

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