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Outlook Special | Faded Red: Free Body Culture, Naxalite Movement And Three Colors Trilogy

In the third installment, author Uttaran Das Gupta is taking the readers through Berlin s Free Body Culture, the inward journey towards his father’s probable association with the Naxalite movement and much more.

BJP Launches Offensive Against Depiction of Farmers Footwear in Durga Puja Pandal

In Kolkata, BJP has paid little heed to the tradition of pandals focusing on contemporary politics but instead claimed that the footwear in a pandal is an insult to the goddess.

Andhadhun to open Indian Film Festival of Los Angeles, Tabu to be honoured

The stories of the Indians struck by the Covid black fungus

Don t show me this message again✕ A doctor performs surgery to remove mucormycosis from a patient at Swaroop Rani hospital (Getty) When the coronavirus pandemic tore through India this year, its ferocity killed tens of thousands of people. But thousands of those who survived were soon back in hospitals with an ominous fungal infection called mucormycosis. The complaints ranged from a blurring of vision to droopy eyelids or discharge from the nose. At high risk were diabetic people or those with very weak immune systems. In many cases, the only treatment is the removal of the fungus from the infected area – and that area is often the eye.

The Day - Deadly black fungus striking India s recovering COVID-19 patients - News from southeastern Connecticut

Khurshida Banu. MUST CREDIT: Photo by Ronny Sen for The Washington Post. Anil Baburao Wankhede. MUST CREDIT: Photo by Ronny Sen for The Washington Post. Surekha Khadche. MUST CREDIT: Photo by Ronny Sen for The Washington Post. Baburao Kamble. MUST CREDIT: Photo by Ronny Sen for The Washington Post. Somnath Bodke. MUST CREDIT: Photo by Ronny Sen for The Washington Post. Chitra Arun Rakshe. MUST CREDIT: Photo by Ronny Sen for The Washington Post. Published June 22. 2021 8:51PM  Ronny Sen and Niha Masih, The Washington Post When the coronavirus pandemic tore through India this year, its ferocity killed tens of thousands of people. But thousands of those who survived were soon back in hospitals with an ominous fungal infection called mucormycosis.

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