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In the vaccination dispute over tennis star Novak Djokovic, the Australian government has once more canceled the Serb’s entry visa. The Australian Department of Immigration said on Friday. Djokovic can appeal the decision in court. It’s regarding his participation in the Australian Open.
Dhe Australian Immigration Minister Alex Hawke has declared the visa of the Serbian tennis professional Novak Djokovic to be invalid in a personal decision. The minister announced on Friday that this was well founded and “in the public interest”. A participation of the world number one in the Australian Open, which starts on Monday, is not yet ruled out because the 34-year-old may be able to appeal further, but it has become unlikely. Djokovic is not vaccinated once morest the coronavirus and is therefore a controversial person in the country that has had tough rules since the beginning of the pandemic.
On arrival last week, the authorities had already refused Djokovic entry due to his lack of vaccination and classified the documents presented as inadequate for his medical exemption.
Because he was not allowed enough time to react, a judge overturned the entry ban during a court hearing on Monday. Djokovic has trained normally since then and prepared for the Australian Open. There he is the defending champion, on Thursday he was drawn once morest the Serbian Miomir Kecmanovic as an opponent for the first round.
The Australian government had announced that it would consider further steps to withdraw Djokovic’s visa. The case also became a severe stress test for the country’s politics following Australia spent many months in tough lockdowns and many of the country’s citizens were also not allowed to enter their homeland for a long time because of the strict rules.
False information was allegedly unintentional
On Wednesday Djokovic denied deliberate misrepresentation and the endangerment of other people, but admitted errors in dealing with his positive test result. Via Instagram, he defended himself once morest two allegations in particular: Neither did he intentionally give false information regarding his travel behavior in the 14 days before the flight to the host country of the Australian Open, nor did he attend an event with children in December, knowing his positive corona test and moves there without a mask.
Djokovic described the “misinformation” that needed to be corrected as “hurtful and worrying to my family”. However, he admitted that during an interview with the French sports newspaper “L’Equipe” on December 18, he already knew regarding his positive test result and had still not canceled the appointment. “Although I went home following the interview and went into isolation for the prescribed length of time, following thinking more carefully, that was a misjudgment and I understand that I should have postponed this commitment,” he wrote.
The fact that it was incorrectly stated in his entry form that he had not traveled in the 14 days before his flight to Australia was described by Djokovic as a “human error” by his agent, “which was certainly not intentional”.
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