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Reuters
Reuters
Health
Caroline Pailliez and Dominique Vidalon

French parents: school's back and already we have COVID cases

A view shows a primary school where two classes have been closed due to cases of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) in Paris, France, September 4, 2020. REUTERS/Gonzalo Fuentes

COVID-19 has forced the closure of a dozen schools in mainland France just days into the new academic year, the government said on Friday, as coronavirus cases surge in parts of the country.

In some other cases the school itself stayed open, but classes where there were outbreaks of infection were sent home, inducing anxiety in parents who have only just shipped their children back to school after the summer holiday.

A view shows a primary school where two classes have been closed due to cases of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) in Paris, France, September 4, 2020. REUTERS/Gonzalo Fuentes

"It's just the third day, they've just started, and there are already (virus) cases," said Giancarlo Ambrosini, whose son's primary school in Paris' 16th district sent home two classes for a fortnight.

Though his son was not caught up in the closure, Ambrosini said he and his partner - who spent the spring coronavirus lockdown at his family home in Italy - would need to devise a backup plan were the school to close. "We both work, so it's not easy."

French Education Minister Jean-Michel Blanquer said the overwhelming majority of France's 12 million pupils had returned without any problems and that glitches were to be expected.

A view shows the entrance of a primary school where two classes have been closed due to cases of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) in Paris, France, September 4, 2020. REUTERS/Gonzalo Fuentes

The school year began on Tuesday.

Pupils aged 11 and over must wear face masks at all times. Attendance is mandatory, though schools can adapt to surges in local infections by limiting numbers for a few days or weeks - again forcing some parents to juggle work and childcare.

Some parents and teachers' unions had voiced concerns that the virus could spread through classrooms.

FILE PHOTO: Secondary school students, wearing protective face masks, line-up to enter in the school canteen room at the College Henri Matisse school during its reopening in Nice as French children return to their schools after the summer break. September 1, 2020. REUTERS/Eric Gaillard/File Photo

"The dynamic looks terribly like what we experienced before lockdown," Jean-Andre Lasserre, head of School Parents' Union FCPE in Paris, said of the virus' spread in the capital.

"How will we ensure that parents who are put into self-isolation because of the children do not lose any income because they cannot go to work?"

The education ministry told Reuters that, for now, affected parents would have to take holiday. It said the labour ministry was working on a measure to ensure that one parent could take paid leave without sacrificing annual holiday.

FILE PHOTO: La Course by Tour de France - Nice, France - August 29, 2020. French Minister for Education Jean-Michel Blanquer wears a protective face mask as he attends the podium ceremony. Pool via REUTERS/Stuart Franklin

France reported more than 7,000 new coronavirus infections on Thursday, nearing the record of 7,578 set on March 31.

(Reporting by Dominique Vidalon and Caroline Pailliez; Writing by Richard Lough)

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