UPDATE - Kenya: Virus outbreak among staff forces ministry shut
Ministry of Devolution latest government office forced to suspend operations due to COVID-19 infections
UPDATES WITH COMMENTS FROM PRIVATE SCHOOLS ASSOCIATION
By Andrew Wasike
NAIROBI, Kenya (AA) – A ministry in Kenya has been temporarily shut down after dozens of staff members tested positive for COVID-19, local media reported on Tuesday.
At least 18 officials at the Ministry of Devolution were found to be infected and told to isolate for two weeks, according to Charles Sunkuli, the ministry’s principal secretary, who was quoted in a report by The Standard newspaper.
“Following mass testing for COVID-19 that was done on July 23, it has come to our attention that 18 officers tested positive for the disease out of 128 samples,” read a memo cited in the report.
It said all staffers will be tested again after two weeks in quarantine.
Several Kenyan government offices have been forced to suspend operations due to COVID-19 cases, with the most recent being a high court in the capital Nairobi on July 30.
Infections have risen in Kenya over recent days, with 544 more confirmed on Monday, along with 13 fatalities.
The country’s overall case count is now up to 22,597, including 382 deaths.
Two more parliamentarians also tested positive for the virus last week, taking the number of confirmed cases among lawmakers to 19.
Other government offices, including the Interior Ministry and the National Treasury, opted to scale down activities instead of closing down completely, but operations have largely been paralyzed due to understaffing.
-'Schools to close'
Meanwhile, Kenya Private Schools Association CEO Peter Ndoro said as many as 124 private schools with a student capacity of 43,000 are on the verge of closure over bills accumulated due to COVID-19.
Citing that there are over 300,000 teaching and non-teaching staff were employed in private schools in the East African country, Ndoro told reporters: "Many private schools will collapse and cannot reopen in 2021… we must ask a critical question, how can we open our main source of income which is the school fees?"
"No bank is listening to private schools…the government should extend a stimulus program to the private schools to cushion them," he was quoted by Kenya's Citizen TV as saying.
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