European scientists find that kids under 10 do not have receptors for Covid-19

Loading player...
Children started going back to classrooms in South Africa at the beginning of the week after the biggest teachers’ union dropped its objections to the gradual re-opening.  The children that turned up yesterday were grades 7 and 12 and they trickled into schools after standing in long queues as they waited in line for their temperatures to be checked.  Many parents are however worried that the safeguards that are in place for social distancing and proper washing of hands are not adequate in many schools.   In the United Kingdom, the government decided yesterday to axe a plan for all primary schools to reopen before their summer after pressure from teachers unions and parents. There are lessons to be learnt from other European countries that have re-opened schools such as Denmark and Germany. The Wall Street Journal’s Bojan Pacevski told Alec Hogg in an interview that the European experience has shown that there had been no cases of children transmitting Covid-19 to each other or their parents. Pacevski said science appears to point to a receptor that enables the virus to enter humans that children under the age of 10 do not have. – Linda van Tilburg Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
9 Jun 2020 6AM English South Africa Investing · Business News

Other recent episodes

BN Daybreak Thurs 15 Jan: Abedian on SA Silence about “21st Century Nazis”; Mining Indaba's back story; Sasol Surges

In this morning's briefing, Alec Hogg unpacks a volatile geopolitical landscape where conflicting reports emerge from Iran—Donald Trump claims de-escalation while internal memos suggest mass casualties. We speak to Iranian-born and bred entrepreneur and former UCT Economics Prof Iraj Abedian, who delivers a scathing critique of the South African government's…
14 Jan 11PM 17 min

BN Briefing: Leaked Iran death toll, US-SA relations, and Equities vs Gold

In this BizNews Briefing, Dr. Iraj Abedian reveals leaked reports of 12,000 deaths in Iran, questioning the South African government’s silence. The Hudson Institute's Josh Meservey analyses Pretoria’s alignment with American adversaries. Plus, David Shapiro discusses the "survival mode" of South African business, and Peter Major explains why equities historically…
14 Jan 5AM 13 min