Parents worry as crowded Kenyan schools reopen after coronavirus
shutdown
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[January 04, 2021]
By Thomas Mukoya
NAIROBI (Reuters) - Hundreds of children
formed an orderly queue that snaked through Nairobi's biggest slum
Kibera on Monday, waiting to enter classrooms for the first time since
March, when the government closed schools after Kenya reported its first
COVID-19 case.
The country is the last in East Africa to fully reopen its schools.
Children in grades four, eight and 12 returned to class in October so
they could prepare for exams postponed amid the pandemic.
The World Health Organization and the U.N. children’s agency UNICEF say
prolonged school closures due to COVID-19 present many risks for
children in poor countries. Higher rates of teenage pregnancy, poor
nutrition, and permanent drop outs from school are among the dangers.
Most boys and girls wore masks as they stood outside the Olympic Primary
School's gates, waiting their turn as school officials took temperatures
and squirted hand sanitiser into their palms.
The real danger, however, lurked inside.
"The government has said our children must go, but they are not safe
according to how I see it," said 54-year-old parent Maurice Oduor,
questioning how social distancing can be practised with about 100
students squeeze into each room.
"There are no classrooms built and no desks added here," he added.
When the children sat down for class, they were shoulder to shoulder,
three at a desk, as they were before the pandemic.
School administrators and teachers told Reuters they were not authorised
to speak to press.
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A teacher talks to schoolchildren at the morning parade at the Toi
Primary School during the reopening of schools, after the government
closed learning institutions due to the coronavirus disease
(COVID-19) outbreak, in Kibera district of Nairobi, Kenya January 4,
2021. REUTERS/Thomas Mukoya
The government has tried to ensure the safety of students and
teachers by distributing more than half a million desks to schools
and supplies of soap, Education Minister George Magoha said on
Sunday.
Kenya's COVID-19 cases began surging in October and peaked in
November at the relatively low rate of 972 cases per day, according
to a Reuters tracker. The country has recorded a total of 1,685
deaths and 96,802 cases, Health Ministry data showed on Sunday.
Testing is limited.
Another parent, Maureen Adhiambo, said she was grateful her children
had avoided the virus and were able to return to school on Monday.
Her neighbour's teenage son recently collapsed with breathing
problems and died, in what the family believes was an unconfirmed
case of COVID-19.
"Our school is overcrowded, that is my biggest concern in bringing
my children back," the 34-year-old said.
(Reporting by Thomas Mukoya,; Additional reporting by George
Obulutsa,; Writing by Maggie Fick, editing by Ed Osmond)
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