Chinese Man Files For Divorce After Smog Drives Family Apart

'Smog Buried My Marriage'
In this Friday, March 8, 2013 Chinese paramilitary policemen march across Tiananmen Square on a hazy day in Beijing, China. Facing public outrage over smog-choked cities and filthy rivers, China's leaders are promising to clean up its neglected environment, a pledge that sets up a clash with political pressures to keep economic growth strong. (AP Photo/Andy Wong)
In this Friday, March 8, 2013 Chinese paramilitary policemen march across Tiananmen Square on a hazy day in Beijing, China. Facing public outrage over smog-choked cities and filthy rivers, China's leaders are promising to clean up its neglected environment, a pledge that sets up a clash with political pressures to keep economic growth strong. (AP Photo/Andy Wong)

BEIJING (Reuters) - A Beijing man is seeking to divorce his wife after she took their son to a tropical island province to escape the capital's notorious smog, saying the long-distance relationship had destroyed their marriage, state media said on Thursday.

The man, identified only by his family name of Wang, married his wife in 2008 and had a son two years later, the Beijing Times reported, in a story widely picked up by other Chinese media outlets online, including Xinhua news agency.

But their son developed serious health problems because of Beijing's air pollution and his wife took the son to the southern resort island of Hainan to escape the haze.

However, Wang's wife did not like Hainan and nor did she like living apart from him, and whenever the two of them met they fought, the report said.

Fed up with this, Wang has filed for divorce in a Beijing court, the newspaper said.

"Smog 'buried' my son's health, and it has 'buried' my marriage," he was quoted as saying.

The divorce case is pending with the court, the report added. It did not say what his wife thought of the divorce proposal.

Years of unfettered economic growth have taken their toll on China's environment and pollution is a major source of public dissatisfaction and unrest, especially smog in major cities.

The government has said tackling pollution is a top priority, but has made little impact on the smog that blights the lives of millions.

(Reporting by Ben Blanchard; Editing by Ron Popeski)

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