Morning Sun

Documents show Djokovic had COVID-19 last month

- By John Pye

Novak Djokovic's lawyers filed court papers Saturday in his challenge against deportatio­n from Australia that show the tennis star tested positive for COVID-19 last month and recovered, grounds he used in applying for a medical exemption to the country's strict vaccinatio­n rules.

The No. 1-ranked Djokovic was denied entry at the Melbourne airport late Wednesday after border officials canceled his visa for failing to meet its entry requiremen­t that all non-citizens be fully vaccinated for COVID-19.

Djokovic was given a medical exemption backed by the Victoria state government and Australian Open organizers on Jan. 1, based on informatio­n he supplied to two independen­t medical panels, and he was approved for a visa electronic­ally.

But it has since emerged that the Victoria state medical exemption, allowed for people who tested positive for the coronaviru­s within the last six months, was deemed invalid by the federal border authoritie­s.

Djokovic has been confined to an immigratio­n detention hotel in Melbourne, where he’s been preparing for the legal challenge against his visa cancellati­on in the Federal Circuit Court on Monday.

The Australian Open starts Jan. 17. Djokovic is the defending champion and has won the Australian Open men’s singles title nine times. He has 20 Grand Slam singles title, a men’s record he shares with Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal.

The Australian Broadcasti­ng Corp. and the Australian Associated Press reported details of the documents late Saturday. It showed Djokovic received a letter from Tennis Australia’s chief medical officer on Dec. 30 last year “recording that he had been provided with a ‘medical exemption

from COVID vaccinatio­n’ on the grounds that he had recently recovered from COVID.”

The exemption certificat­ion said the date of the 34-year-old Serb’s first positive test was Dec. 16, 2021, “and that he had not had a fever or respirator­y symptoms in the past 72 hours.”

Djokovic attended a Dec. 17 event in Belgrade honoring young tennis players. The event was covered by local media, and parents posted photos on social media showing Djokovic and the children not wearing masks. It’s not clear if Djokovic knew the results of his test at the time.

On Dec. 14, Djokovic had attended a Euroleague basketball game between Red Star and Barcelona in a packed sports hall in Belgrade. He was photograph­ed hugging several players of both teams, including some who soon later tested positive.

The court submission Saturday said Djokovic received

confirmati­on from Australia’s Department of Home Affairs saying that his travel declaratio­n had been assessed and that his responses indicated he met the requiremen­ts for quarantine-free arrival in Australia.

So, who is at fault? Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison said “rules are rules” and that incoming passengers were responsibl­e for meeting border regulation­s.

Tennis Australia and the government of Victoria state, where the Australian Open is played, are blaming confusion over the precise definition­s regarding grounds for medical exemptions.

Tennis Australia, which runs the tournament and organizes the logistics for more than 2,000 incoming players, staff and officials, reportedly gave incorrect interpreta­tions to players about the acceptable grounds for an exemption. That included the interpreta­tion

that having had a coronaviru­s infection within the previous six months would qualify.

The federal government disagreed.

The Victoria state government mandated that all players, staff, fans and officials must be fully vaccinated for COVID-19 to enter the tournament.

The state, which approved the medical exemptions for Djokovic, said those exemptions for were for access to Melbourne Park, not the border.

Australian Open organizers have not commented publicly since Wednesday, except to tell Australian newspapers that no players have been misled over the vaccinatio­n requiremen­ts.

Tournament director Craig Tiley has continued working in the background with Djokovic.

Tiley’s video message to Australian Open staff about the tournament’s “difficult time in the public arena” was published

in News Corp. newspapers Saturday.

“There’s been a circumstan­ce that relates to a couple of players, Novak particular­ly . . . in a situation that is very difficult,” Tiley said in the video. “We’re a player-first event. We’re working closely with Novak and his team, and others and their team, that are in this situation.”

The 34-year-old Djokovic was one of two players put into detention in a hotel in Melbourne that also houses refugees and asylum seekers. A third person, reported to be an official, left the country voluntaril­y after border force investigat­ions.

The other player was 38-year-old doubles player Renata Voráþová, who had already been in Australia for a week before an investigat­ion by the border officials. She told media from the Czech Republic she’d been confined to a room and there was a guard in the corridor.

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