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Struggling mother and baby products retailer Mothercare says it will shut 60 stores by June 2019, instead of the 50 previously earmarked for closure.

The closures will put 900 jobs at risk, up from the 800 previously stated.

The company has not yet given details about which stores will close as it is talking to the staff affected.

Mothercare also confirmed that it would be raising another £32.5m from its existing shareholders by issuing new shares.

The chain's chief executive, Mark Newton-Jones, told the BBC's Today programme that its UK business had suffered from a lack of investment and "hadn't had a lick of paint" in recent years.

However, its rescue plan would now allow it to modernise as a retailer.

He said: "We will really be able to speed up the transformation, and by God we need to speed up the transformation, because the retail landscape is pretty brutal at the moment."

Mr Newton-Jones added that Mothercare had "grown prolifically" outside the UK, with two-thirds of the retailer's turnover now coming from overseas.

The extra Mothercare store closures mainly come from its Childrens World division, which will go into administration. Mothercare bought the Childrens World chain in 1996, and rebranded the stores - which were mainly in out-of-town locations - as Mothercare.

Although the Childrens World division is being wound up, 13 of its 22 stores will transfer to other Mothercare group companies and stay open.

The restructuring of Mothercare comes after creditors backed a company voluntary arrangement (CVA), which allows companies to shut loss-making shops and reduce rents.

However, the plans for Childrens World were not approved by the necessary 75% majority, prompting the decision to close the division down.

Mothercare said it would have 77 UK stores by June 2019 and 73 stores by the end of the 2021-22 financial year.

Retailers on UK High Streets have been hit by weak sales, online competition and rising costs, affecting 22,000 jobs this year.

High-profile failures include Maplin and Toys R Us, while other High Street chains announcing store closures include Marks & Spencer, House of Fraser, Carphone Warehouse, New Look and Carpetright.