Amid the celebrations on the 78th Independence Day on Thursday, thousands of people across the national Capital faced outages due to over 50 incidents of tripping of power transmission lines due to the use of banned Chinese 'manjha' in celebratory kite flying on the occasion.
According to the discom officials on Friday, the maximum number of tripping incidents due to Chinese 'manjha' (metal coated kite string) took place in the north Delhi areas.
Tata Power Delhi Distribution Limited (TPDDL) supplying electricity to the north Delhi areas reported no kite-flying induced tripping incidents at the sub transmission level, said a spokesperson of the discom. "However, 49 interruptions were reported at the 11kv level, affecting around 25,000 customers," she said.
The discom has been actively urging people to enjoy kite flying responsibly. A special safety advisory video was shared by the discom advising citizens not to fly kites near electrical installations and avoiding use of "metallic Manjha" for it, she added. “The other discoms BRPL and BYPL reported six such trippings,” a spokesperson of the BSES said.
"To raise awareness about the dangers of flying kites near electrical installations, BSES had launched a comprehensive campaign. This includes social media posts, interactions with Resident Welfare Associations (RWAs) and newsletters aimed at sensitizing consumers about the risks associated with metal-coated manjha," he said.
The Chinese 'manjha' is popular name of the metal coated kite string that came from China. Although its use is banned because of incidents related to neck injuries faced by commuters specially two wheeler riders as well as the birds, after getting entangled in the loose 'manjha" of detached kites, metal coated 'manjha' is easily available in the market despite action by the police and other authorities.