The Oakland Press

Djokovic in limbo as he fights deportatio­n

- By John Pye

Locked in a dispute over his COVID-19 vaccinatio­n status, Novak Djokovic was confined to an immigratio­n detention hotel in Australia on Thursday as the No. 1 men’s tennis player in the world awaited a court ruling on whether he can compete in the Australian Open later this month.

Djokovic, a vocal skeptic of vaccines, had traveled to Australia after Victoria state authoritie­s granted him a medical exemption to the country’s strict vaccinatio­n requiremen­ts. But when he arrived late Wednesday, the Australian Border Force rejected his exemption as invalid and barred him from entering the country.

A court hearing on his bid to stave off deportatio­n was set for Monday, while the 34-year-old Serb and defending Australian Open champion was forced to wait it out in Melbourne at a secure hotel used by immigratio­n officials to house asylum seekers and refugees.

The tournament begins on Jan. 17. Djokovic is hoping to overtake rivals Rafael Nadal and Roger Federer in the record books and win his 21st Grand Slam singles title, the most by any player in men’s tennis.

Djokovic’s securing of an exemption so that he could play triggered an uproar and allegation­s of special treatment in Australia, where people spent months in lockdown and endured harsh travel restrictio­ns at the height of the pandemic.

After his long-haul flight, the tennis star spent the night trying to convince authoritie­s he had the necessary documentat­ion, to no avail.

“The rule is very clear,” Australian Prime Minister

Serbia’s Novak Djokovic holds the Norman Brookes Challenge Cup after defeating Russia’s Daniil Medvedev in the men’s singles final at the Australian Open tennis championsh­ip in Melbourne, Australia, Feb. 21.

Supporters of Serbia’s Novak Djokovic stand outside a quarantine facility where Djokovic is believed to be in Melbourne, Australia, Thursday.

Scott Morrison said. “You need to have a medical exemption. He didn’t have a valid medical exemption. We make the call at the border, and that’s where it’s enforced.”

Health Minister Greg Hunt said the athlete’s visa was canceled after border officials reviewed Djokovic’s medical exemption and looked at “the integrity and the evidence behind it.”

The grounds on which he was granted an exemption were not immediatel­y disclosed.

While Djokovic has steadfastl­y refused to say whether he has gotten any shots

against the coronaviru­s, he has spoken out against vaccines, and it is widely presumed he would not have sought an exemption if he had been vaccinated.

A federal judge will take up the case next week. A lawyer for the government agreed the nine-time Australian Open champion should not be deported before then.

“I feel terrible since yesterday that they are keeping him as a prisoner. It’s not fair. It’s not human. I hope that he will win,” Djokovic’s mother, Dijana, said after speaking with him briefly by telephone from Belgrade.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ??
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO
 ?? JAMES ROSS — AAP VIA AP ??
JAMES ROSS — AAP VIA AP

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