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Germany preparing 'urgent support' for Covid-hit India: Merkel

German chancellor Angela Merkel said on Sunday her government was preparing emergency aid for India as the country struggles to cope with an explosion in coronavirus infections.

"To the people of India I want to express my sympathy on the terrible suffering that Covid-19 has again brought over your communities," Merkel said in a message shared on Twitter by her spokesman Steffen Seibert.


"The fight against the pandemic is our common fight. Germany stands in solidarity with India and is urgently preparing a mission of support."

There were no immediate details about the kind of aid Germany would offer. But Der Spiegel weekly, citing unnamed sources, on Saturday said Germany's armed forces had received a request to help organise oxygen supplies.

With a new coronavirus variant spreading through its 1.3 billion people, India has become the world's top coronavirus hotspot in recent days, reporting 349,691 new cases on Sunday alone.

Germany will from Monday impose new travel restrictions on passengers coming from India in a bid to curb in the spread of the new variant.

Wealthy Germany, with a world-class health system, has repeatedly helped other countries in need of medical assistance during the pandemic.

It has taken in Covid-19 patients from across Europe and sent medical staff and ventilators abroad, including to Portugal in February.

Germany is currently itself grappling with a third wave of the pandemic that has brought intensive care units close to capacity.

Tough new nationwide restrictions came into effect at the weekend, including sweeping shutdowns and school closures for German regions with high incidence rates.

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Climate change could increase child stunting in south Asia by 2050, a study finds

Researchers at the University of California Santa Barbara examined how exposure to extremely climate conditions during pregnancy impacts children's health

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Climate change could increase child stunting in south Asia by 2050, a study finds

Highlights

  • Over 3 million additional cases of stunting projected in south Asian children by 2050 due to climate change.
  • Hot-humid conditions four times more harmful than heat alone during pregnancy's third trimester.
  • Early and late pregnancy stages identified as most vulnerable periods for foetal development.

Climate change-driven heat and humidity could lead to more than three million additional cases of stunting among south Asia's children by 2050, according to a new study that highlights the severe health risks facing the world's most densely populated region.

Researchers at the University of California Santa Barbara examined how exposure to extremely hot and humid conditions during pregnancy impacts children's health, focusing on height-for-age measurements, a key indicator of chronic health status in children under five.

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