用户名/邮箱
登录密码
验证码
看不清?换一张
您好,欢迎访问! [ 登录 | 注册 ]
您的位置:首页 - 最新资讯
Bangladesh schools reopen after 18-month Covid-19 shutdown
2021-09-12 00:00:00.0     海峡时报-亚洲     原网页

       

       DHAKA (AFP) - Children in Bangladesh flooded back into classrooms on Sunday (Sept 12) as schools reopened after 18 months, one of the world's longest coronavirus shutdowns.

       The resumption came after Unicef warned that prolonged school closures during the Covid-19 crisis were worsening inequities for millions of children across South Asia.

       In the capital Dhaka, students at one school were welcomed with flowers and sweets, and told to wear masks and sanitise their hands. Some hugged each other in excitement.

       "We are really excited to be back at school," 15-year-old Muntasir Ahmed told AFP as he entered the campus. "I am hoping to physically see all of my friends and teachers, not through a laptop window today."

       At the gate, school officials checked the body temperatures of students before allowing them to enter.

       The school's vice-principal, Mr Dewan Tamziduzzaman, said he "didn't expect such a big number to be turning up on the first day".

       Only 41 per cent of Bangladesh's 169 million population have smartphones, according to the country's telecom operators' association, which means millions of children cannot access online classes.

       Even with smartphones, students in many of Bangladesh's rural districts do not have the high-speed internet access usually required for e-learning.

       Unicef warned in a report released Thursday that the pandemic has accentuated "alarming inequities" for more than 430 million children in the region.

       "School closures in South Asia have forced hundreds of millions of children and their teachers to transition to remote learning in a region with low connectivity and device affordability," Unicef's regional director George Laryea-Adjei said in a statement. "As a result, children have suffered enormous setbacks in their learning journey."

       In India, 80 per cent of children aged 14-18 years said they learnt less than when they were in a physical classroom, according to Unicef.

       Among children aged between six and 13 years, 42 per cent said they had no access to remote learning.

       "Their future is at stake," Mr Deepu Singh, a farmer in India's Jharkhand state, said last week of his children aged nine and 10.

       The pair have not been to school in a year and have no Internet access at home, Mr Singh told AFP, adding: "I do not know English. I cannot help him (my son), even if I want to."

       More on this topic

       Related Story

       Bangladesh reopens even as Covid-19 slams its hospitals

       Related Story

       Is there a future for in-person schools amid pandemic?

       Students in the rest of the region were similarly impacted, Unicef reported.

       In Pakistan, 23 per cent of young children had no access to any device for remote learning.

       Some towns in Nepal have been broadcasting radio lessons due to the lack of Internet access.

       "We are (in) a dangerous situation," Nepalese schoolteacher Rajani K.C. told AFP last week. "If the pandemic continues and the academic sector loses more years, what kind of human resource will the country have in the future?"

       Related Stories:

       Related Story

       More Covid-19 patients can recover at home, shorter quarantine: New measures at a glance

       Related Story

       South Korea planning to live 'more normally' with Covid-19 after October

       Related Story

       Useful protection or not warranted? Third Covid-19 jab debate rages

       Related Story

       French ex-health minister charged over handling of Covid-19 pandemic

       Related Story

       The way we were: Denmark lifts all Covid-19 curbs

       Related Story

       'My saviour': Hanoi's tiny balconies a refuge in Covid-19 lockdown

       Related Story

       Unvaccinated people are 11 times more likely to die of Covid-19: US CDC

       Related Story

       In world first, Cuba starts Covid-19 jabs for toddlers

       Related Story

       New Covid-19 variant of interest, Mu, unlikely to overtake Delta: Experts

       Related Story

       A look at what we know about Japan's contaminated Moderna Covid-19 vaccines

       Join ST's Telegram channel here and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.

       Topics:

       More Whatsapp Linkedin FB Messenger Telegram Reddit WeChat Pinterest Print Copy permalink https://str.sg/3Swa

       


标签:综合
关键词: Covid     access     school     children     students     learning     Story     Unicef    
滚动新闻