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Added on the 30/08/2021 14:00:00 - Copyright : EFE Inglés
Buenos Aires, Feb 17 (EFE) - (Camera: Alberto Caratozzolo) On-site school classes returned to Buenos Aires and several Argentine provinces after almost a year with hardly any activities in schools due to the covid-19 pandemic. FOOTAGE OF SCHOOL KIDS IN ARGENTINA
Tangerang, Sep 6 (EFE/EPA).- Schools in the Indonesian city of Tangerang reopened Monday with limited number of students after the government began easing COVID-19 restrictions. The Indonesian government officially announced the implementation of restrictions on community activities (PPKM) last week, from Aug. 31 to Sep. 6, and lowered the status of a number of regions from PPKM level 4 to PPKM level 3.Indonesia has recorded over 4.1 COVID-19 cases with more than 130,000 deaths since the beginning of the pandemic. (Camera: ADI WEDA).SHOT LIST: STUDENTS RETURN TO SCHOOL IN TANGERANG, INDONESIA.
Banda Aceh, Jan 25 (EFE/EPA).- Disinfected classrooms, masks, and temperature controls — the northwestern Indonesian province of Aceh is pulling out all the stops to ensure they do not let their guard down as children return to school. Indonesia has recorded nearly one million Covid-19 cases since the beginning of the pandemic. (Camera: ADI WEDA). SHOT LIST: STUDENTS QUEUING TO ENTER SCHOOL IN BANDA ACEH, ACEH, INDONESIA.
Pupils arrive at Levre skole primary school in Baerum, in the Norwegian capital Oslo, as schools reopen after six weeks of closure due to the coronavirus. Along with Austria, Denmark and Germany, Norway is among the first countries to start easing restrictions, which were announced on March 12. Norway has reported 7,505 confirmed cases of the new coronavirus and 193 deaths, while the curve of hospitalised cases has dropped significantly in recent weeks. IMAGES of pupils returning to school
Schools in Denmark reopen after a month-long closure over the novel coronavirus, becoming the first country in Europe to do so. However classes are only resuming in about half of Denmark's municipalities and in about 35 percent of Copenhagen's schools, as other have requested more time to adjust to health protocols still in place. IMAGES