(Melbourne) The ultimate legal battle between world number one tennis player Novak Djokovic and the Australian government, which maintains that the unvaccinated Serb from COVID-19 constitutes a “health risk” and intends to expel him from the country, has held Sunday before the Federal Court of Australia in Melbourne, whose decision is expected during the day.
Updated yesterday at 11:37 p.m.
The three judges of the Court heard for several hours the arguments of the representatives of the tennis player and those of the government, before retiring to deliberate.
Allowed to leave the detention center where he was placed on Saturday, Djokovic followed the hearing online from the offices of his lawyers. A “final” which could have long-term repercussions for the career of the 34-year-old Serb, accustomed to high-intensity matches.
On the eve of the first racket shots of the Australian Open where “Nole” hopes to win a 21and record Grand Slam title, the interim hearing must decide whether the player should be immediately sent home and banned from Australian territory for three years, or if he can play the tournament.
In his conclusions filed Saturday before the Court, the Minister of Immigration Alex Hawke maintained that the presence of Djokovic in the country “is likely to represent a health risk”.
He says it encourages “anti-vaccination sentiment” and could deter Australians from getting their booster shots as the Omicron variant spreads rapidly across the country.
“Civil Unrest”
The presence in Australia of the champion could even “lead to an upsurge in civil unrest”, added the minister.
Although he described the risk of Djokovic himself infecting Australians as “negligible”, the minister considered that his past “disregard” of health rules against COVID-19 sets a bad example.
Sunday before the Court, the lawyers of “Djoko” qualified the detention of their client and his possible expulsion of “illogical”, “irrational” and “unreasonable”.
The government “doesn’t know what Mr. Djokovic’s views are right now,” lawyer Nick Wood pleaded, saying his client has never publicly supported the anti-vaccination movement.
Government lawyer Stephen Lloyd responded that the champion’s failure to be vaccinated nearly two years into the pandemic and his repeated disregard of health rules, including failing to isolate when he knew he was infected, constituted sufficient proof of his position.
The decision of the three Federal Court judges will be virtually impossible for both the Australian government and Djokovic to challenge.
This is the second time that the Serb has been subject to deportation proceedings.
He had been blocked on his arrival in Australia on January 5 and placed in administrative detention for the first time. The player, who contracted COVID-19 in December, had hoped for an exemption to enter the country without being vaccinated, but the authorities did not accept this explanation.
The Australian government suffered a humiliating setback on January 10 when a judge blocked Djokovic’s deportation, reinstated his visa and ordered his immediate release.
The Minister of Immigration, however, canceled his visa for the second time on Friday under his discretionary powers, citing “health and public order reasons”. And Djokovic returned to the now world-famous Park Hotel, the austere detention center for illegal aliens on Saturday.
In a statement released on Wednesday, the tennis player admitted to having incorrectly filled out his declaration of entry into Australia.
“Incompetence”
The player with 86 ATP titles, seen in Serbia and Spain in the two weeks preceding his arrival, contrary to what he declared in the immigration form upon his arrival, pleaded “human error”.
This twisty soap opera is set in a country whose people have endured some of the toughest anti-COVID-19 restrictions in the world for nearly two years, and where elections are scheduled for May.
Hence a charged political context. Pressure has intensified around Conservative Prime Minister Scott Morrison, accused of “incompetence” by the Labor opposition.
The Djokovic affair is also followed assiduously in Serbia where “Nole” is considered a national hero. On Friday, President Aleksandar Vucic accused Australia of “mistreating” him.