Covid-19: A timeline of New Zealand's MIQ system

February 3, 2022

It has been in place for nearly two years now.

New Zealand has had the controversial MIQ system for nearly two years.

Opposition parties at times called it a "lottery of human misery", while the Government hailed it as a life-saver in uncertain times.

Here’s a timeline of Aotearoa's managed isolation:

March 2020: Our borders closed to anyone except New Zealand citizens and residents, after the country’s first Covid19 case in February.

April 2020: Anyone entering New Zealand was required to enter MIQ and 18 isolation facilities opened.

June 2020: New MIQ hotels open in Rotorua, Christchurch, Hamilton, and Auckland.

July 2020: MIQ opened in Wellington and police were introduced after security breaches.

August 2020: The NZ Defence Force was deployed and charges were introduced for some users.

October 2020: The allocation system was introduced and travellers were required to have a MIQ voucher before flying.

January 2021: The introduction of pre-departure tests for all arrivals, except from low-risk countries like Australia.

February 2021: The vaccine rollout began, MIQ workers were eligible for their jabs.

April 2021: The trans-Tasman bubble opened.

July 2021: The trans-Tasman bubble was suspended.

August 2021: The Delta outbreak moved the country to Alert Level 4 and community cases were placed into MIQ.

September 2021: A virtual lobby was added to the MIQ booking system to manage high demand.

November 2021: MIQ stays for arrivals were reduced to seven days, followed by home isolation.

December 2021: MIQ stays increased to ten days after the emergence of Omicron.

Jessica Mutch McKay gives her opinion on a big day for the PM who has been slipping in the polls.

The MIQ system has caught thousands of Covid-19 cases at the border and played a major role in many of the domestic freedoms New Zealand has had during the pandemic.

On Thursday the Prime Minister announced the five-step plan to open the borders.

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