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Reuters
Reuters
Health

Mexico City shuts down classes again, enters higher COVID-19 risk tier

FILE PHOTO: A child receives hand sanitizer while arriving at the Ignacio Zaragoza elementary school as Mexico City's authorities resumed in-person classes today after a downward trend in the number of infections and hospitalisations of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19), in Mexico City, Mexico June 7, 2021. REUTERS/Luis Cortes/File Photo

Mexico City schools that had just gone back to in-person classes will be closed again starting Monday as the sprawling capital climbs into a higher tier of coronavirus risk, education authorities said on Saturday.

Mexico City officials had loosened restrictions on gatherings in schools, hotels, stores and restaurants just two weeks ago as the dense urban zone moved into the lowest risk tier of the government's four-level "traffic light" model.

But the federal Health Ministry on Friday evening put Mexico City, home to more than 9 million people, a step higher on the scale for June 21 to July 4.

Mexico City Mayor Claudia Sheinbaum said the city's Epidemiological Traffic Light, a calculation of risk factors, has climbed to nine points from eight points, putting the capital into the more restrictive tier.

Mexico City's Federal Educational Authority (AEFCM) said in a statement the suspension of classes applied to both private and public schools.

Mexico, which began COVID-19 vaccinations at the end of 2020, has reported more than 230,959 deaths from the coronavirus and 2,471,741 confirmed infections.

(Reporting by Daina Beth Solomon; Editing by Steve Orlofsky)

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