Vietnam: Schools start reopening after closing for about a year

More than 17 million students in Vietnam are expected to return to school today for the first time in about a year, according to the country’s Ministry of Health, as authorities announced plans to start vaccinating children from the age of five against COVID. 19.

Vietnam lifted many of the restrictive measures it took in October to stem the new coronavirus pandemic, but almost all students have been taking online classes since the beginning of last year.

Most schools in the country are expected to reopen by mid-February, according to the health ministry.

In a separate statement issued at the weekend, the government said it plans to purchase 21.9 million doses of the Pfizer / BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine for children ages 5 to 12.

More than 75% of Vietnam’s 98 million people have received at least two doses of the new coronavirus vaccine, and authorities plan to give a booster dose to the entire adult population by the end of March.

Schools in the capital Hanoi will start reopening tomorrow, Tuesday, with precautionary measures, such as temperature control and protocols in place to detect positive cases, according to authorities.

Vietnam had managed to curb the spread of the new coronavirus for most of 2020 before the delta-strained strain led to an increase in cases last year.

The Ministry of Health also announced that 14,112 new cases were registered in the country yesterday, Sunday. In all, Vietnam has recorded 2.34 million cases of the new coronavirus and more than 38,300 deaths from COVID-19.

SOURCE: AMPE

Source: Capital

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