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Daily Mirror
Daily Mirror
Travel
Milo Boyd

Woman spends 'surreal' five hours at Chinese airport due to Covid checks in place

A journalist travelling to China documented the scale of the country's intense zero-Covid policy as she took five hours just to get through the airport.

Justine Jankowski had to take several PCR tests, disinfect her bag and endured several temperature checks before she was allowed through.

China's zero-Covid policy has seen major cities in the country put under strict lockdowns, despite public outcry and a tanking economy.

Huge areas with populations of hundreds of thousands of people have been locked down after just a few cases were detected, leaving citizens unable to leave their homes.

Videos emerged this week of shoppers stampeding out of an Ikea as officials attempted to lock the building down due to infection fears.

Justine, a correspondent for French TV channel TF1, posted a series of videos online documenting her exit from China's Tianjin Binhai International Airport, which took five hours in total.

The videos show Justine and other passengers following the lengthy procedures required by the government to enter the country.

It first started when Justine's plane landed and passengers on the flight had to depart the aircraft row by row, which took over an hour.

Justine then had to walk in single-file through the empty terminal and was asked to sign documents to confirm she would obey the zero-Covid rules.

China has kept very strict rules regarding entry to the country (Xinhua/REX/Shutterstock)

After a first temperature check on a digital screen, Justine had to put her bag through a scanner-like machine to get it disinfected.

Following this, all passengers had to have their temperature checked again - before walking through to the next part of the terminal - in a staggered fashion.

Passport control consisted of an anonymous voice call where they had to scan their own documents.

Passenger were then subjected to mandatory PCR tests, followed by customs, before they were able to board coaches to the isolation hotels.

China also requires travellers to take two PCR tests prior to departure.

Passengers are required to take several Covid tests (Xinhua/REX/Shutterstock)

To collect their luggage, the travellers had to go to a specific collection point "under guard" from hazmat-clad workers.

After six hours, Justine finally arrived at the hotel for ten days quarantine, where her bags were disinfected again.

The protocol inside the hotel forced people to stay in their rooms and anyone leaving risked the loudspeaker warning going off.

Ten days later, Jankowski was finally free from quarantine before she had her personal documents examined one more time.

She said: "To be honest, we were all prepared to go through this experience. We all had friends who left China and came back, in the past, who told us about it.

"I've been living in China for over five years and experiencing this zero-Covid policy, so it didn't feel like a surprise. We were just exhausted cause we landed around 7 pm and arrived at the hotel at 2am.

"After a long flight, you just want to sleep. But I have to admit it feels surreal when you come back straight from Europe, where everyone got used to covid."

There was one silver lining. Justine revealed the quarantine period had actually reduced from three weeks to 10 days, which was a "relief".

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