South China Morning Post

Warning against ending ban for Djokovic

Former minister says allowing Serb to play in Australian Open would be a ‘slap in the face’

- Reuters in Melbourne

Waiving Novak Djokovic’s visa ban to let him play in the Australian Open tennis event would be a “slap in the face” for Australian people who vaccinated for Covid-19, opposition lawmaker and former home affairs minister Karen Andrews said yesterday.

Serbian Djokovic was deported from Australia in the lead-up to the grand slam tournament in January for declining to be vaccinated.

The former world No 1 is barred from the country until 2025 but could have his three-year visa ban waived by the Australian federal government.

Australia in July scrapped a rule that required internatio­nal travellers to declare their Covid vaccinatio­n status, and Djokovic has said he was hoping for “positive news” on his bid to play next year’s Australian Open.

Andrews said, however, that the rule change should have no bearing on Djokovic’s case.

“There would have been other people in similar circumstan­ces that have also had their visas cancelled,” the lawmaker told ABC Radio.

“So if immigratio­n now chooses to make a special allowance for Novak Djokovic the obvious question is what are they going to do about anyone else who may be in such similar circumstan­ces?”

No comment was immediatel­y available from Djokovic. Australia’s Home Affairs ministry reiterated that it does not comment on individual cases.

Andrews said lifting Djokovic’s ban would be a “slap in the face for those people in Australia who did the right thing [and] got vaccinated.”

“[Why should] Novak Djokovic be allowed back into the country simply because he’s a high-ranking tennis player with many millions of dollars?” she added.

“It shouldn’t be just one rule for [him] and a different rule for everyone else.”

Djokovic, who has won the Australian Open a record nine times, was unable to travel to New York for the recent US Open because he was not vaccinated but said he had no regrets about missing two of the year’s four grand slams.

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