Coronavirus pandemic

Thai schools reopen with strict hygiene rules

Students eating lunch together, separated by plastic sheets, at a school in Bangkok yesterday after months of distance learning.
Students eating lunch together, separated by plastic sheets, at a school in Bangkok yesterday after months of distance learning. PHOTO: EPA-EFE

BANGKOK • Mask-wearing students catching up with friends at one Bangkok high school were quickly told to spread out as they headed back to lessons yesterday after months of distance learning due to coronavirus restrictions.

The teenagers, resuming classes along with all other public school students in the kingdom, chatted animatedly before being called to sit in widely spaced rows for the opening session.

School principal Arwuth Meekhanphet warned them to closely follow new hygiene rules, which included face coverings and social distancing. "You never know whether you or your friend has it," he said into an intercom.

Thailand has recorded over 3,100 coronavirus cases and 58 deaths - a low toll considering it became the first country outside China to detect an infection, in mid-January.

Ahead of the nationwide resumption of classes, the authorities recommended that class sizes be restricted to 20 to 25 students, while door knobs, desks and other areas at risk of spreading infection be sanitised frequently throughout the day.

Student Parichat Klanpumisri said that she was not concerned about catching the virus, but reported feeling nervous about meeting up with classmates again after isolating for so long.

"I haven't met anyone for a long time and the atmosphere of the classroom and Internet learning is so different," the 17-year-old said.

Bars, clubs and massage parlours, which are sometimes fronts for brothels, could also reopen yesterday evening.

However, the authorities have said that there should be no sex trade, while extremely strict limits on social situations should be observed - such as bar patrons standing a metre apart.

Despite the push for normality in daily life, the Thai Cabinet on Tuesday extended the state of emergency for another month.

The authorities insist that the emergency laws - which critics say could be used to target political dissent and censor the press - are necessary as they prepare to receive certain travellers, such as business people and medical tourists.​

  • NUMBERS AT A GLANCE

    >3,100

    Number of cases recorded in Thailand with 58 deaths - a low toll considering it became the first country outside China to detect an infection, in mid-January.

Prime Minister Prayut Chan-o-cha defended the decision earlier this week, saying the laws were not meant to curb freedoms.

Criticism of his administration has been constant throughout the pandemic, as Thailand's already flagging economy lurched into a recession.

With tourism and export-led sectors being worst affected, the economy is expected to contract by 5 per cent to 7 per cent by the end of the year.

AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE

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A version of this article appeared in the print edition of The Straits Times on July 02, 2020, with the headline Thai schools reopen with strict hygiene rules. Subscribe