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Study suggests sleep disturbances among infants may lead to altered brain development




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I am absolutely well: Amit Shah scotches rumours on health

Union home minister Amit Shah on Monday squelched the speculation that had swirled about his health by saying that he is fine and is free of any disease whatsoever. “I want to make it clear that I am absolutely well and am not suffering from any disease,” Shah said in a tweet, poking fun at those behind the rumours about his medical condition.




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Greta's climate march brings UK streets to a halt

The Swedish teen activist warned world leaders she will "not be silenced when the world is on fire".She accused politicians of ignoring the climate emergency and "sweeping their mess under the rug.




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China halts to honour coronavirus victims, 'martyrs'

With flowers pinned to their chests, Xi and other Chinese leaders paid a silent tribute in front of the national flag to the victims of the COVID-19, which is regarded as the worst public health disaster in China's history.




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A horrifying `globalThis` polyfill in universal JavaScript

The globalThis proposal introduces a unified mechanism to access the so-called “global object” a.k.a. “the global” in any JavaScript environment. It sounds like a simple thing to polyfill, but it turns out it’s pretty hard to get right.




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Union Health Ministry issues fresh guidelines for discharging COVID-19 patients




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'I am healthy, have no disease,' says Amit Shah dismissing rumours around his health




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Do not anticipate worst case situation like developed countries in India, says Union Health Minister Harsh Vardhan




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Mismatch in COVID-19 reports of private lab will be checked: Delhi Health Minister




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SBI General Insurance launches Arogya Sanjeevani health insurance policy




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Alter Realkatalog (1501-1952), Teil Bayern - BSB Cbm Cat. 805(1 b (1870)




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Alter Realkatalog (1501-1952), Teil Bayern - BSB Cbm Cat. 805(1 b (1870)




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Alter Realkatalog (1501-1952), Teil Bayern - BSB Cbm Cat. 805(1 b (1870)




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Alter Realkatalog (1501-1952), Teil Bayern - BSB Cbm Cat. 805(1 b (1870)




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Alter Realkatalog (1501-1952), Teil Bayern - BSB Cbm Cat. 805(1 b (1870)




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Alter Realkatalog (1501-1952), Teil Bayern - BSB Cbm Cat. 805(1 b (1870)




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Alter Realkatalog (1501-1952), Teil Bayern - BSB Cbm Cat. 805(1 b (1870)




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Alter Realkatalog (1501-1952), Teil Bayern - BSB Cbm Cat. 805(1 b (1870)




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Central public health team arrives in Pune to evaluate COVID-19 situation




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A dirty war’s casualties

Author: 
More attention needs to be paid to the Syrian Grand Mufti’s charges that the Middle East is being destabilised by Western forces I met the Grand Mufti of Syria, Ahmad Badreddin Hassoun, in Damascus a few months after he had lost his son in a terror attack in 2012. Impeccably turned out with his turban and flowing robes, he looked understandably distraught. Those were the early days of the Syrian civil war and there was a struggle to interpret and analyse why violence was sneakily spreading in a secular country where President Bashar al-Assad was visibly popular. The Grand Mufti, who is considered one of the top three people in Syria, was uncertain why assassins targeted his 21-year-old son who was still studying in university, and was to get married the day he was killed. The answers came to him when he finally met his son’s killers. In one of his media interviews, he revealed how the two killers had no clue to either the identity of his son or motive. They were given the registration number of his car and a paltry amount of British pounds—350 each. His son’s life was worth only 700 pounds, the Mufti had said ruefully. After meeting his son’s killers, who were barely out of their teens, the Mufti pleaded with the authorities that they should be freed, but they had to face due process of law. Since then, the Mufti has seen his beloved country bloodied by a war heaped on its people by competing regional and global ambitions. He was recently in Delhi where he grandly announced that the five-year war, which has left more than 4,00,000 people dead and dislocated millions of others, was about to end. With relief and joy written on his face, the Grand Mufti described in detail how the secular Syrian Arab Army with the help of allies had defeated terrorists from over 40 countries. He blamed some of Syria’s neighbours and world powers for the endless war that the Middle East region had been subjected to. He claimed that these terrorists belonging to Daesh and other outfits like Nusra were recruited from different countries. There were many women, too, who were lured into this mythical Islamic State led by a Khalifa through Facebook or other social media platforms. The Mufti said that the fighters had abandoned the women from Chechnya, Tunisia, Jordan and some European countries after they began to lose their hold over towns in the last few months. He also hinted that some fighters had been mysteriously air-lifted by helicopters to safe places. Perhaps the Grand Mufti was lending credence to the allegations by Russian armed forces that before the fall of Dier-al-Zor, Syria’s seventh largest city, unmarked aircraft had pulled out hardcore Islamic State fighters to safer havens. The implications of the Mufti’s charge and that of the Russian armed forces are serious. There are obvious suggestions that the Islamic State was able to attain much success due to the support it received from covert operatives belonging to Western powers and their allies in the region. Another example of this relationship, as pointed out by the Russian Defence Ministry, is the circumstances in which a three-star General was killed while on military duty in Syria. The Russians claimed that the location and coordinates of the General were provided to terrorists working together with US troops. There have been no denials of these charges, but the bizarre manner in which the Arab Spring became a reason for regime changes in the Middle East by reviving old ethnic and sectarian fault lines has lessons for many societies, according to the Grand Mufti. He wanted India, a secular society that was under colonial rule like Syria, to remain vigilant about forces that wanted to disrupt settled societies. He gave the example of the Rohingya crisis that, in his reckoning, was getting inordinate publicity in the Western media. He believed the crisis was being used to destabilise not just Myanmar, but also China and India. Interestingly, the Mufti also visited Lucknow, which is a major centre of Islamic learning. Here he spoke about the need to rise above the sectarian divide between Shias and Sunnis, and look ahead and not backwards for inspiration. In these times, when sectarian issues are reordering the Islamic World, the Mufti’s message gains great importance. The big question is—will he be on the winning side?   
From HardNews print issue: 
Lead Image: 




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Mangaluru: 'Smart' push to coastal health care

Work on the 37-bedded ICU at the new super specialty block of district Wenlock Hospital is in final stages of completion. Part of area-based development of Mangaluru Smart City mission, new ICU that is being set up will initially be used to handle need for this critical life support system that the global pandemic could bring forth




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Unni Mukundan has a jolly interaction with healthcare workers

Unni Mukundan has a jolly interaction with healthcare workers




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Attacks on cops will be strictly dealt with: DGP

Attacks on cops will be strictly dealt with: DGP




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I am absolutely well: Amit Shah on health rumours

I am absolutely well: Amit Shah on health rumours




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Covid-19 effect: Bullying rises against patients, health workers in Japan

A government campaign to raise awareness seems to be helping, at least for medical workers




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Punjab CM asks DCs to focus on health, education




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Two test positive for nCoV in Punjab; health improving




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COVID-19: 'Govt is monitoring the situation closely', says Punjab Health Minister




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Follow government advisories to fight COVID-19: Punjab Health Minister




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No positive COVID-19 case reported in Punjab today: State Health Minister




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41 confirmed COVID-19 cases in Punjab: State Health Minister




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COVID-19: Punjab announces special health insurance cover of Rs 50 lakh each for police personnel, sanitation workers




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Cured COVID-19 patient expresses gratitude to healthcare workers




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Health Ministry denies Punjab CM's claim of community transmission in State




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33,000 people enrolled at de-addiction centres in Punjab during lockdown: State Health Minister




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PGI-Chandigarh to train SAARC health professionals on COVID-19




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Chandigarh provides healthcare to elderly at home




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CM will decide about extension of lockdown: Punjab Health Minister




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Punjab Health Minister launches sanitisation drive via drones in Mohali




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Conduct health test for sanitation workers: KTR

Officials told to prepare for the monsoon




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BJP expresses concern over govt.’s ‘negligence’ towards health facilities

‘State government has failed to protect the people of Delhi from the virus’




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Health department conducts checking at Zirakpur grocery shops




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Plea in Punjab and Haryana HC seeks directions to health facilities to attend non-Covid cases




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The Centre will need to nurse the Constitution and India back to good health




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This dry fruit is a healthy munching snack




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Rochelle salt – a structural reinvestigation with improved tools. I. The high-T paraelectric phase at 308 K

A novel sample cell with control of temperature and relative humidity permitted collection of data of excellent quality, enabling unrestrained refinement of all atomic parameters. One of the K atoms in the structure is disordered; very strong anisotropy in three of the four water O atoms indicates partial static disorder, which does not involve the bonded H atoms.






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Bis[benzyl 2-(heptan-4-yl­idene)hydrazine-1-carboxyl­ate]bis­(thio­cyanato)­cobalt(II)

The title compound, [Co(NCS)2(C15H22N2O2)2] or C32H44CoN6O4S2, was prepared from cobalt(II) nitrate, benzyl carbazate and ammonium thio­cyanate in the presence of 4-hepta­none. The compound crystallizes with two centrosymmetric complexes in which the cobalt(II) atoms have a trans-CoO2N4 octa­hedral coordination geometry. In the crystal, N—H⋯S, C—H⋯S and C—H⋯.π contacts stack the complex mol­ecules along the b-axis direction.




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Crystal structure of a salt with a protonated sugar cation and a cobalt(II) complex anion: (GlcN–H, K)[Co(NCS)4]·2H2O

The title compound, d-(+)-glucosa­mmonium potassium tetra­thio­cyanato­cobaltate(II) dihydrate, K(C6H14NO5)[Co(NCS)4]·2H2O or (GlcNH)(K)[Co(NCS)4]·2H2O, has been obtained as a side product of an incomplete salt metathesis reaction of d-(+)-glucosa­mine hydro­chloride (GlcN·HCl) and K2[Co(NCS)4]. The asymmetric unit contains a d-(+)-glucos­ammonium cation, a potassium cation, a tetra­iso­thio­cyanato­cobalt(II) complex anion and two water mol­ecules. The water mol­ecules coordinate to the potassium cation, which is further coordinated via three short K+⋯SCN− contacts involving three [Co(NCS)4]2− complex anions and via three O atoms of two d-(+)-glucosa­mmonium cations, leading to an overall eightfold coordination around the potassium cation. Hydrogen-bonding inter­actions between the building blocks consolidate the three-dimensional arrangement.