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The No. 1 in world tennis is preparing this Sunday to defend his chances of playing the Australian Open, arguing Monday in court that he was exempt from vaccination.
World tennis No.1 Novak Djokovic is preparing this Sunday to defend his chances of playing the Australian Open, arguing Monday in court that he was exempt from vaccination and might enter the country following contracting the Covid- 19 in December.
The online hearing in federal court is scheduled for 10 a.m. local (midnight in Switzerland). Uncertainty reigns over the participation in the hearing of Novak Djokovic, still in his detention center. No one – except staff – is allowed in or out of the facility, which is located in a former hotel, where 32 migrants are also held, trapped in Australia’s immigration system, some for years.
A handful of protesters gathered on Sunday morning at the bottom of the detention center, where hundreds of supporters, anti-vaccination protesters and migrant rights activists had already gathered the day before in a festive atmosphere.
Serbian Prime Minister Ana Brnabic said over the weekend that Serbia fully supported the player and that she had had “constructive talks” with the Australian Foreign Minister. “We made sure he got gluten-free food, exercise equipment, a laptop,” she told Serbian TV Pink.
Request for adjournment refused
In an order made public on Sunday, Judge Anthony Kelly said the case would proceed as scheduled, denying a government request to adjourn until Wednesday.
“The date of the first positive PCR test was recorded on December 16, 2021”, which would allow the world No.1 to be exempted from the vaccination imposed by Australia, said on Saturday the lawyers of the Serbian, 34, in a report. document filed with federal court.
Djokovic, however, attended two public events in Belgrade, the day and the day following this positive test in December, according to various social media posts: a ceremony in honor of young Serbian players on December 17 – without a mask – and the presentation of a tribute stamp to his effigy the day before.
Entry refused
Tennis Australia granted him an exemption to participate in the tournament, following his request was approved by two independent medical panels, his lawyers said. But on his arrival in Australia, on the night of Wednesday to Thursday, the authorities had refused him entry, considering that his grounds for exemption did not meet the strict conditions for entry into the territory imposed once morest the Covid-19.
The Australian government insists that a recent infection with the Covid-19 virus only counts as an exemption for residents only, not for foreign nationals trying to enter the country. Foreigners are still banned from traveling to Australia, and those allowed to enter must be fully vaccinated or have a medical exemption.
For Djokovic, time is running out, eight days before the Australian Open (January 17-30), which he won nine times and where he aims to afford a 21st Grand Slam tournament, which would place him in the summit of tennis history, ahead of its two historic rivals, Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal.
44,155 new cases
In a video that leaked to the local press on Saturday, the boss of the Australian Federation Craig Tiley, under fire from critics for his management of the file, defended the “incredible work” of his teams. The Federation has been accused of misleading players regarding vaccination obligations to enter the country.
Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison has defended the revocation of Djokovic’s visa. “The rules are the rules,” he said. Selected as “Djoko” following also having her visa canceled, Czech player Renata Voracova, 38, a doubles specialist, left Australia on Saturday.
While much of Australia has tightened restrictions to fight a new wave linked to the Omicron variant, the state of Victoria, of which Melbourne is the capital, recorded 44,155 new cases on Sunday.
(AFP)