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No class for a year: Covid-19 worsens Latin American inequality | Life malaymail.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from malaymail.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
WORLD / AMERICAS By AFP Published: Mar 10, 2021 04:48 PM Like some 890,000 other pupils, 8-year-old Brithany has not been to class in a year in Panama - the country with the most missed in-person school days due to the coronavirus pandemic.
Brithany attends an occasional online lesson on her single mother s prepaid cellphone, Milena Mendosa, who works two jobs cleaning houses and selling her wares at a market.
On some days, the online classes get canceled. On others, the cellphone network cannot handle the traffic, and Brithany ends up playing instead of learning.
Rafael, 5, participates in his virtual classes while his mother, Ana, 33, feeds her other son, in Panama City, Panama, on March 4. Photo: AFPAccording to UNICEF, the UN children s agency, schools in 14 countries have remained largely closed since March 2020 - two-thirds of them in Latin America and the Caribbean.
No class for a year: Covid worsens Latin American inequality
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PANAMA CITY, March 10, 2021 (BSS/AFP) – Like some 890,000 other pupils, eight-year-old Brithany has not been to class in a year in Panama the country with the most missed in-person school days due to the coronavirus pandemic.
Brithany attends an occasional online lesson on the prepaid cellphone of her single mother, Milena Mendosa, who works two jobs cleaning houses and selling wares at a market.
On some days, the online classes get canceled. On others, the cellphone network cannot handle the traffic, and Brithany ends up playing instead of learning.
According to UNICEF, the UN’s children agency, schools in 14 countries have remained largely closed since March 2020 two-thirds of them in Latin America and the Caribbean.