Gulf Times

Kids aren’t test subjects: Danish mums rebel

- Reuters

Denmark eased its coronaviru­s lockdown yesterday by reopening schools and day care centres, but concerns that they might become breeding grounds for a second wave of cases convinced thousands of parents to keep their children at home.

The rate of new cases is falling, but the government’s decision has led to a heated debate over how to balance the needs of the economy and the safety of the population – in this case its youngest citizens.

“I won’t be sending my children off no matter what,” said Sandra Andersen, the founder of a Facebook group called “My kid is not going to be a Guinea Pig” that has more than 40,000 followers.

“I think a lot of parents are thinking, ‘Why should my little child go outside first’,” said the mother of two girls aged five and nine.

The month-long lockdown in Denmark, where the virus has infected more than 6,600 people with close to 300 deaths, has also closed shops, bars, restaurant­s, cinemas and gyms.

Yesterday Prime Minister Mette Frederikse­n defended the move, undertaken on health authority recommenda­tions, to ease it by resuming teaching up to fifth grade, saying that this would allow parents to return to work and “get the economy going again”.

Christian Wejse, a scientist at the department of infectious diseases at Aarhus University, said that he understood people’s concerns “because we’ve spent a month trying to avoid contact”.

But any new infections would be unproblema­tic in an age group “where few fall ill, and those who do won’t get very sick”.

Looking at neighbouri­ng Sweden, which has kept schools open without a drastic rise in infections, children also appeared not to be a major driver for transmissi­on of the virus, he said.

Teaching staff are under instructio­n to keep social distancing in place between children and, with many school buildings staying closed, in some cases preparing chalk for pupils to write with on the playground tarmac.

“I don’t think it is right for the kids not to hug their friends,” said Nonne Behrsin Hansen, a mother of two aged two and four.

“We keep the kids home, because the situation in the daycares before the Covid-19 outbreak were not okay, and the conditions they are setting up now are even worse.”

For now at least, most members of Momster, an online network of thousands of Danish mothers, do not believe that the authoritie­s have things under control, according to its founder and chief executive Esme Emma Sutcu.

“Suddenly, these mums feel like they just have to throw their kids to the frontline and I think their reaction is: ‘Don’t mess with our kids’,” she said.

 ??  ?? Danish Prime Minister Frederikse­n speaks with pupils during the reopening of Lykkebo School in Valby, Copenhagen.
Danish Prime Minister Frederikse­n speaks with pupils during the reopening of Lykkebo School in Valby, Copenhagen.

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