New research by the World Health Organisation (WHO) found pollution, ranging from cooking fires to car fumes, was linked to one in eight deaths in 2012.
Maria Neira, the WHO's public and environmental health chief, said the figure was "shocking and worrying".

The biggest pollution-related killers were heart disease, stroke, pulmonary disease and lung cancer, the WHO said.

And the outdoor pollution death toll was put at 3.7 million, with sources ranging from coal heating fires to diesel engines. Nearly 90% of those deaths were in developing countries.

The WHO said the hardest-hit regions were Southeast Asia, which includes India and Indonesia, and the Western Pacific, ranging from China and South Korea to Japan and the Philippines.

The new estimates are more than double previous figures and based mostly on modelling, but the WHO has changed its research methods so it is difficult to make a comparison with past estimates.

"Few risks have a greater impact on global health today than air pollution.
"The evidence signals the need for concerted action to clean up the air we all breathe."
Dumai in Indonesia's Riau province"We don't know if dust from the Sahara is as bad as diesel fuel or burning coal," he said.

Coal stoves and wood is also use in Africa, Africans are also at risk.
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