"I will distribute crackers among children living in Subhash Nagar and Khajan Basti tomorrow. After all Diwali is a festival children wait for the entire year to burst crackers and enjoy," Bagga said.
A few days ago, Bagga had said he would distribute firecrackers to children living in slums in the Hari Nagar Assembly constituency.
When asked if his actions were against the spirit of the SC's ban, Bagga denied it and said he was opposed to "selective ban", pointing at an IIT report which said firecrackers contributed only 0.3 per cent of total pollution.
"We have an e-wallet account where we receive contributions for purchasing firecrackers. This time I got donations above Rs 1.5 lakh...," he said, attributing the overwhelming contributions to the "public anger" on the "selective ban".
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He also asked if those who filed public interest litigation (PIL) for a ban on firecrackers during Diwali would be doing so during New Year celebrations.
In its October 9 order, the apex court had said its last month's order, temporarily lifting the stay and permitting sale of firecrackers, would be made effective only from November 1, 12 days after the festival of lights.
It, however, said Diwali would not be "cracker-free" in Delhi-NCR as people would burst firecrackers which they had purchased before the ban order.