6,000 Women Run for Health at Zydus Pinkathon Delhi on International Women's Day

The 8th edition of the Zydus Pinkathon in Delhi saw nearly 6,000 women participate in various race distances on International Women's Day. The event emphasized inclusion, featuring visually impaired runners, infant-carrying mothers, grandmothers, and cancer survivors. It served as a platform to amplify the "Easiest Exam" campaign for breast cancer awareness through self-examination. The run marks a renewed chapter for Delhi's running community, promoting fitness as a lifelong journey.

Key Points: Zydus Pinkathon Delhi: 6,000 Women Run for Health Awareness

  • 8th edition in Delhi after 6.5 years
  • Featured races from 3km to 100km
  • Highlighted inclusive participation
  • Promoted breast self-exam awareness
4 min read

Zydus Pinkathon Delhi turns International Women's Day into a run for health as 6,000 women gather for 8th edition

6,000 women gathered in Delhi for the 8th Zydus Pinkathon, promoting breast cancer awareness and inclusive fitness on International Women's Day.

"Watching nearly 6,000 women gather at 5:30 in the morning... is incredibly powerful. - Milind Soman"

New Delhi, March 8

Celebrating the indomitable spirit of women this International Women's Day, Zydus Pinkathon Delhi brought together nearly 6,000 women at the iconic Jawaharlal Nehru Stadium for its landmark eighth edition, according to a release.

Returning to the capital after six and a half years, the event commenced at 5:30 am and featured race categories from 3 km, Lifelong 5 km, and 10 km to ultradistances of 50 km, 75 km, 100 km, and 100 km relay, welcoming everyone from first-time participants to seasoned endurance athletes.

Among the most inspiring highlights of the day was the participation of one visually impaired runner in the ultradistance 50 km category, along with one visually impaired team competing in the 100 km relay.

Infant-carrying mothers participated in the 3 km category with their infants, while grandmothers, cancer survivors, and long-distance runners shared the same start line, citing yet another powerful example of the platform's commitment to inclusion and determination. The event was also graced by Ashish Sood, Home, Education, Sports, Power & UD Minister in the Government of the National Capital Territory of Delhi.

In the 3 km race, Kriti Sharma secured first place with a timing of 17:31, followed by Sanjana Kumari in second place at 17:45 and Kiran Singh in third with 18:33.

In the Lifelong 5 km category, Aayushi Gupta claimed the top podium position with a finish time of 24:37, while Sarika Yadav finished second at 24:59 and Shillaza Girdhar placed third with 28:51. In the 10 km race, Pooja emerged victorious with an impressive time of 40:45, followed by Gayatri Mathur in second place at 45:53 and Nikita Rathee in third with 46:49.

Speaking after the event, Milind Soman, Founder, Pinkathon, said, "Watching nearly 6,000 women gather at 5:30 in the morning at Jawaharlal Nehru Stadium on International Women's Day is incredibly powerful.

Delhi has always shown heart, and today we saw courage, consistency, and community come together again. From first-time 3km participants to ultra runners and our visually impaired athletes in the 50K and 100K relay, this edition truly reflected what Pinkathon stands for, inclusion, endurance, and long-term commitment to health."

Held under the title partnership of Zydus Lifesciences, the run continued to amplify awareness around preventive healthcare through the Easiest Exam campaign, encouraging women to adopt regular self-breast examinations.

The initiative reinforces the message that health awareness must move beyond conversation into consistent action.

Flagging off the run, Meha Patel, Vice Chairperson, Zydus Foundation, said, "Health is the foundation of every family's well-being. With 1 in 8 women diagnosed with breast cancer, awareness and vigilance are essential.

Self-breast examination is a simple step that can help detect the disease early and save lives. The energy at today's Delhi run shows how initiatives like Zydus Pinkathon and the Easiest Exam campaign are turning awareness into action. This Women's Day, thousands of women running for their health is a powerful reminder that early action can save lives"

Over the years, more than 50,000 women have participated in Pinkathon's earlier Delhi editions.

The 2026 turnout marks a renewed chapter for the city's running community, once again demonstrating that when women are given the space to show up, they redefine what participation in sport looks like.

Ankita Konwar, Founder, Invincible Women, added, "What stood out this morning was the diversity of participation; young runners, seasoned athletes, mothers running with their babies, grandmothers, and visually impaired participants pushing extraordinary limits. Endurance is built over time, and events like Pinkathon give women the confidence to keep progressing. Delhi showed that fitness is not a one-day goal, but a lifelong journey."

Founded in 2012, Pinkathon continues to use running as a platform to build participation, visibility, and sustained attention to women's health across India. Following Delhi, the Zydus Pinkathon calendar moves to Pune on April 5, carrying forward the momentum of the 2025-26 season.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

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Rohit P
My wife participated in the 5km category. The atmosphere was electric! It's not just a run, it's a movement. Hats off to Milind Soman and the team for bringing this back to Delhi after so long. The inclusion of mothers with infants and cancer survivors sends a powerful message about health being for everyone.
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Ashwin V
While the event is commendable, I hope the organizers ensure it's truly accessible. The article mentions visually impaired runners, which is great, but what about wheelchair users or others with different mobility challenges? Inclusion should mean everyone. Just a thought for future editions.
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Sarah B
The timings are impressive! Pooja finishing 10km in 40:45 is seriously fast. It's wonderful to see women's competitive running getting this platform. Hope this inspires more young girls to take up sports seriously, not just as a hobby.
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Neha E
This is the real spirit of Women's Day! Not just token wishes on social media, but actual action and community. The "Easiest Exam" message is so important. My mother is a survivor, and early detection saved her life. More awareness is needed in smaller towns too.
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Michael C
As an expat living in Delhi, it's heartening to see such large-scale, positive events. The diversity mentioned – grandmothers, new moms, survivors – is what makes India special. The community feel is palpable even through the article. Well done to all organizers and participants.

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