The Borneo Post

Australian official rejects Djokovic vaccine ‘blackmail’ claim

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MELBOURNE: Novak Djokovic is not being “blackmaile­d” by Australian Open organisers, a senior official said Wednesday, insisting a requiremen­t for players to be vaccinated was about safety.

The 34-year-old world number one would be bidding for a record-breaking 21st Grand Slam title in Melbourne in January, but he has refused to say if he has been jabbed against coronaviru­s.

His father Srdjan told Serbian television on Sunday his son “probably won’t” play the opening Grand Slam of the year over the mandatory inoculatio­n rules. “Of course he would want to go with all his heart,” he said.

“But I really don’t know if that will happen. Probably not under these conditions, with this blackmail and when it’s done that way.”

Martin Pakula, sports minister in Victoria – the state where the Australian Open is held – said he was keen for the nine-time champion to defend his title.

But he told reporters: “If you’re a visiting internatio­nal tennis player or a visiting sportsman of any kind, it’s about your responsibi­lity to the community that you are being welcomed into.

“And that’s why we are asking those internatio­nal tennis stars to follow the same requiremen­ts as Victorians are.

“It’s not about blackmail, it’s about making sure the Victorian community is protected.”

Tournament chief Craig Tiley made clear last month that all players must be inoculated and there would be no concession­s.

The Australian Open went ahead this year but players were forced to spend two weeks in hotel quarantine, crowds were restricted and a five-day snap lockdown was called mid-event.

Organisers expect it will run as scheduled in 2022 from Jan 17.

They have said fully vaccinated players can enter Australia without being quarantine­d or confined to biosecure bubbles, although that scenario could be complicate­d by the emergence of the new Omicron coronaviru­s variant.

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Novak Djokovic

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