Alarm as Thai children separated from Covid-hit families

Alarm as Thai children separated from Covid-hit families
People maintain social distancing while waiting for free meals at a park in Bangkok in April 2020. Photo: CNS/Athit Perawongmetha, Reuters

BANGKOK (UCAN): A controversial move by Thai authorities to separate children from their parents in the case of Covid-19 coronavirus infections within their families is causing concern in Bangkok.

The Bangkok Metropolitan Administration has set up a care centre for children aged three- to 14-years-old who have either tested positive for the coronavirus or whose parents require treatment for the virus.

“The centre organises fun activities and gives the youngsters toys to play with to keep them occupied and ease the stress of being away from their families, whose members were in some cases themselves infected and undergoing treatment,” the Bangkok Post reported.

However, the move has caused concerns about possible violations of children’s rights in Thailand, where it has become common practice to force people who test positive for the Covid-19 but exhibit no or only mild symptoms to stay for weeks in so-called field hospitals set up at stadiums, shopping malls and elsewhere.

“There is no way I would allow anyone in this government to separate me from my child. Period,” one commenter noted.

“In other words, the government is now kidnapping children,” said another.

Only a small minority of children experience longer-term symptoms from Covid-19, according to various studies conducted internationally.

The Thai government’s handling of a surging Covid-19 outbreak, which has seen nearly 700,000 people infected and almost 5,600 die—the vast majority since April—has drawn widespread criticism

“In children, SARS-CoV-2 infection is usually asymptomatic or causes a mild illness of short duration,” said the authors of a new study conducted in the United Kingdom and published in the British medical journal, The Lancet.

In the study, which involved more than 1,700 British children, the researchers found that only 4.4 per cent of children had symptoms that lasted a month or longer.

“It is reassuring that the number of children experiencing long-lasting symptoms of Covid-19 is low,” Dr. Emma Duncan, an endocrinologist at King’s College London, lead author of the study, said in a statement.

“Nevertheless, a small number of children do experience long illness with Covid-19,” Duncan said.

The Thai government’s handling of a surging Covid-19 outbreak, which has seen nearly 700,000 people infected and almost 5,600 die—the vast majority since April—has drawn widespread criticism.

A severe weeks-long lockdown, which has devastated the economy, has proved ineffective in halting the spread of infections, which have been on the rise daily for weeks.

The country registered over 17,300 infections and 117 deaths on August 6. At the same time, a mass vaccination project, which kicked off after repeated delays in early June, has faced chronic shortages of vaccines. 

As of August 5, fewer than six per cent of the population in a country of 69 million had been fully vaccinated.

Frequently contradictory statements and seemingly ad hoc polices by the military-allied government, whose popularity has plummeted, have added to the unease among many locals that those in charge are unable to handle the country’s biggest crisis in recent memory.

Once touted as a success story in containing the virus, Thailand is now seen by many experts as an object lesson in how ill-advised government policies can cause chaos and worsen an outbreak.

“Thailand is no longer an example of success but of disappointment,” Peerasit Kamnuansilpa, dean of the College of Local Administration at Khon Kaen University, wrote in an op-ed published on August 4.

“Again, one only needs to read the daily Covid statistics to see how far we have fallen,” Kamnuansilpa wrote.

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