(Bloomberg) — Angry parents in Hong Kong are criticizing a government order to close schools again, leaving more than 500,000 kindergarten and primary students locked out of classrooms as the financial hub races to contain an omicron outbreak in the community and enforce its outlier Covid Zero policy.
Schools across the city will suspend in-person classes for kindergarten and primary schools from Friday for about two weeks until the Lunar New Year holiday, echoing a repeat of closures two years ago that upset exasperated parents. It’s at least the fourth mandate to close classrooms since the pandemic began — with Hong Kong instituting one of the longest school closures globally at one point — and comes as other cosmopolitan cities from New York to London and Sydney elect to keep schools open and live alongside the virus.
“It feels like it’s Groundhog Day all over again — they are closing schools, saying they are doing it to protect our kids but they are in fact harming them,” said Jen Yuan, whose daughter is enrolled at English Schools Foundation Tsing Yi International Kindergarten. “School is the safest place for them. There are more social distancing restrictions at school than there are at the dim sum houses that they are allowing to stay open.”
Shutting classrooms again is the latest in a raft of intense measures Hong Kong has adopted in recent weeks, as part of a zero-tolerance virus policy that China has deemed necessary for the territory to reopen borders with the mainland. Air passengers from “high-risk” countries are set to be banned from transiting through Hong Kong International Airport, Bloomberg reported Tuesday. Authorities last week closed gyms and playgrounds, and stopped dining-in at restaurants in the evenings.
As schools and teachers prepare to go back to virtual learning on video calls, parents are taking to chat groups and social media to vent. Many say the government is overreacting to a small number of cases — the city found just 42 community-infected cases after conducting around 920,000 tests over the past two weeks — and are upset the government isn’t doing more to vaccinate older Hong Kong residents who are more at risk. Less than a quarter of those 80 and older are inoculated.
Hong Kong imposed the order after three children, two aged three and a four-year-old, tested positive after exposure to infected relatives at home. None of the infections occurred in a school setting.
“It’s a very difficult decision to make,” Chief Executive Carrie Lam said while announcing the school closures on Tuesday. “On the one hand, we want to protect children from infection. But then if we suspend classes, we know there will be drawbacks in relation to their mental and physical development.”
Some parents are already petitioning the government to keep schools open. Felice Blake wrote to both Lam and the head of the Education Bureau, and urged other families to do the same while sharing a letter template on a mom’s group on Facebook. A lawyer who’s worked on children’s rights issues, Blake said Hong Kong authorities aren’t adhering to the United Nations’ Convention on the Rights of the Child, which says kids are entitled to education and play.
“If you’re going to do it, you have to use it as an opportunity to bring the cycle to an end,” Blake, who has a three-year-old son, said about the school closure. “But they are not vaccinating kids in that period. They are not doing enough to vaccinate older people.”
The city plans to expand its vaccination program to give children between the ages of 5 and 11 China’s Sinovac vaccine. Lam said the vaccination program for children in that age group will be administered at schools once they re-open after the Lunar New Year holiday in early February.
Closures Widen Disparity
Both the UN Children’s Fund, UNICEF, and the global body’s Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization, or UNESCO, have called on governments to avoid school closures whenever possible. UN data shows that more than 24 million students risk not returning to school after school closures during the pandemic.
Hong Kong schools had a mixed response to the latest classroom closures. At the private Hong Kong International School, teachers were told last week to prepare for virtual learning and have been sending school-issued iPads home with students daily in case the campus was closed overnight.
“Teachers are ready to go virtual on Friday — they’ve been preparing for this eventuality,” HKIS spokeswoman Carrie Chen said. “They have online materials prepared, and they’ll be talking to kids about the expectations for home learning.”
At Chiu Sheung School in Hong Kong’s Western district, principal Chim Hon-ming said many schools were worried about teachers who will need to put in more work to prepare remote learning materials and interactive activities. Some students may also still lack equipment for online school despite Hong Kong’s subsidy programs. Last year, Chim’s school helped more than 100 families get government-subsidized tablets and distributed dozens of mobile sim cards for home Internet connections, he said.
“We really don’t want another suspension of face-to-face classes,” Chim said, adding that virtual teaching is less effective because students tend to be less focused and it’s harder for teachers to notice misbehavior. “But it can’t be helped because it’s for the sake of controlling the pandemic.”
Working Families
The shuttered classrooms will put extra pressure on working parents, many of whom will have to scramble to find someone to take care of their children, said Ho Chu-ping, president of the Federation of Parent-Teacher Association. Some parents have had to form volunteer groups to help babysit for other families in need, Ho said.
The Education Bureau has instructed schools to remain open to look after students who don’t have anyone to take care of them at home. Still, parents said many young students need adult support to help them attend virtual classes.
The non-profit group Organizer of Society for Community Organization, which aids low-income and immigrant families, is bracing for more families to seek aid as schools close and the latest wave of restrictions kick in. Already, there’s been an uptick in families who can’t afford rent, food or even an internet connection in a city where multi-million dollar apartments can be a stone’s throw away from shabby sub-divided single-room dwellings shared by multiple families.
“The school closure is another hit to their hard life,” said community organizer Sze Lai Shan. “I truly hope this is the last round of Covid outbreak and social restriction policies. People’s lives are getting worse.”
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