The first cases of the illness that quickly became known as Covid-19 were detected in the Chinese city of Wuhan, and in those first terrible months of the global health crisis thousands of people in China died.
But then everything changed, and the country introduced the strictest of surveillance systems, mandatory testing for everyone every week and lockdowns that would have been unimaginable in a place such as Ireland.
Zero Covid was — and remains — the goal in China, and it has been a central plank of Chinese leader Xi Jinping’s rule over the last two-and-a-half years.
Irish Times journalist Denis Staunton is in Beijing this week reporting on the National Congress of the Chinese Communist Party.
‘As I was saying’: Trump rallies the faithful on return to scene of assassination attempt
Brothers behind Irish Starbucks franchise served invalid notice on tenants, tribunal finds
‘Outrageous’ of Israel to threaten peacekeepers in Lebanon, President Michael D Higgins says
Pat Leahy: Trouble at the top? Relations between Simon Harris and Micheál Martin are frayed
He talks to In The News presenter Conor Pope about his unusual arrival in China, the quarantine and testing requirements he faced, and how zero Covid continues to impact lives in China.
He also looks at happenings at the Congress — which has seen Xi Jinping cement his authority in the country — and events in recent weeks, including escalating tensions over Taiwan, and what it means for China and for the world.