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Djokovic gets a vaccination waiver for the Australian Open

mandrill

Well-known member
Aug 23, 2001
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What a train wreck. There were violent demonstrations by the antivaxxers in Victoria repeatedly earlier this year. The ordinary Aussie obeyed the stringent lock-downs and supported the state government. And now that same state government turns a blind eye to a fake vaxx exemption??!!??!!...

That's the sort of shit that ends the premier's political career and brings down the government. Just nuts!
 

bver_hunter

Well-known member
Nov 5, 2005
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Now we know why Novak had his visa rejected:

He made a typo on his visa application:
Last Name: Djokovic. First Name: No Vac

:D:ROFLMAO::LOL:😅😂
 
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shack

Nitpicker Extraordinaire
Oct 2, 2001
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Now we know why Novak had his visa rejected:

He made a typo on his visa application:
Last Name: Djokovic. First Name: No Vac

:D:ROFLMAO::LOL:😅😂
Not sure whether to laugh or groan. Not bad, though.
 

Cantaro

Well-known member
Aug 4, 2016
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I still don't know who gave him the ok, the Victoria Tennis commission? Let him sue them.

Australian Open players given exemptions similar to Novak Djokovic under investigation

Home affairs minister Karen Andrews says border force officials received intelligence about other players who may not have met entry requirements

The Australian Open could be thrown into further disarray with the home affairs minister, Karen Andrews, revealing other international players and officials are being investigated after Novak Djokovic’s visa was cancelled.

Andrews also defended the government’s treatment of Djokovic, who is in a Melbourne detention hotel waiting for a legal hearing, rejecting his family’s accusation the government was “keeping him captivity”.

“Djokovic is not being held captive in Australia,” Andrews told the ABC on Friday morning. “He is free to leave at any time that he chooses to do so and border force will actually facilitate that.”

Andrews confirmed the Australian Border Force, which she oversees, is looking at other individuals who have travelled to Australia in similar circumstances for the Open.

“I will be briefed further on that potentially today,” she told the Nine Network.

“But we do have the intelligence to indicate there are some individuals here now that have not met the entry requirements and we have to investigate that.”

Andrews could not say how many players were being investigated, adding anyone entering Australia had to show evidence of vaccination or medical reasons why they are not vaccinated.

“I know there is a lot of chatter about the visa. The visa, on my understanding, is not the issue, it is the entry requirement.

“The [Australian] Border Force has been very clear that he [Novak] was not able to meet the requirement to provide the evidence he needed for entry to Australia.”

The world No 1 faces another three days in the Park Hotel alongside refugees and asylum seekers in Melbourne amid one of the great modern sports controversies, waiting for a legal ruling over whether he can defend the Australian crown he’s won nine times.

Beyond the quiet of his hotel, the outcry in his native Serbia over the treatment of Djokovic is growing with protests in Belgrade and his family insisting Australia’s treatment of one of sport’s greatest performers was a disgrace.

In Serbia, where Djokovic is idolised as a nation hero, his family held a rally in front of the country’s parliament building in the capital Belgrade, with around 300 fans chanting slogans backing him.

His father Srdjan promised the crowd the protests would be held every day until Djokovic was released.

Nearer to home, former Davis Cup player Paul McNamee who ran the Australian Open from 1995 until 2006 as tournament director, joined those who think the 34-year-old deserved his day on court, not in court.

“It’s not fair. The guy played by the rules, he got his visa, he arrives, he’s a nine-time champion and whether people like it or not he’s entitled to fair play,” McNamee told ABC News.

“There’s no doubt there’s some disconnect between the state and the federal government. I hate to think politics are involved but it feels that way.”

Djokovic had travelled to Australia after Victoria state authorities granted him an exemption to the vaccination rules but on arrival on Thursday morning the ABF cancelled his visa.

A court hearing to attempt to stop his deportation is set for Monday. Djokovic is being detained at a secure hotel used more often by immigration officials to house asylum seekers and refugees.

“He is the only player that I’ve ever known in the history of the Australian Open that has had his visa rescinded,” McNamee said.

“Players need to know with confidence that if they’re flying round the world to events, there’s not going to be this sort of problem at entry. It’s a problem we’ve seen over the last two years in Australia and the victim of that is the No 1 player in the world.

“He was following the rules. Now you might be angry that he was given an exemption, but players need to have confidence that the rules they abide by are going to be enforced.

“It’s not fair to him. Whether you like the rules or not, he doesn’t make the rules – so he deserves his day on court and not in court, in my opinion.


 

Hard Idle

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Jan 15, 2005
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If anyone cheats the system and gets caught, then they deserve to be shown the door out of the country. PERIOD!! The ones that are defend such actions are the real cowards!!
Who cheated though? It was the Australians themselves who issued the supposedly invalid visa in the first place. The most charitable explanation is that the national, regional and tournament officials where inexplicably dealing with different sets of standards.

The more troubling explanation is that the mix-up was deliberate in order to provide this opportunity for some sort of political statement as opposed to just rejecting the application from the beginning. That is also extremely cowardly. As is the failure to explain the material difference between this rescinded exemption and the other exemptions they approved (at least three).
 

Hard Idle

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Jan 15, 2005
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He knew it months ago, I can't say I feel bad for him. He's got enough money.
I agree that if he really felt strongly about it and wanted to make a point, he should have boycotted the event on his own end before it came this.

However, one does not win 20 titles at anything without having a competitive drive which would not settle for walking away without at least testing the process to the limits.

At first I thought it could have been as simple as not making the dumb decision to post his invitation on Instagram and instead arrive relatively unannounced so his admission is an accomplished fact by the time controversy erupts. But in light of how well rehearsed the Prime Minister has sounded in his photo ops, I know think it's more likely Djokovic was baited in with the apparently invalid exemption in order to provide the government with a political grandstanding opportunity.
 
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shack

Nitpicker Extraordinaire
Oct 2, 2001
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I agree that if he really felt strongly about it and wanted to make a point, he should have boycotted the event on his own end before it came this.
But Novax wanted it both ways.
1641573526282.png

But in light of how well rehearsed the Prime Minister has sounded in his photo ops, I know think it's more likely Djokovic was baited in with the apparently invalid exemption in order to provide the government with a political grandstanding opportunity.
I'm skeptical of that theory. Novax is small fish for the PM of Australia. Nobody needed to bait him to make him an ant-vaxxer. Novax needs the tournament more than the tournament needs him and most of the population of Oz seems to think so as well.
 

bver_hunter

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Nov 5, 2005
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Who cheated though? It was the Australians themselves who issued the supposedly invalid visa in the first place. The most charitable explanation is that the national, regional and tournament officials where inexplicably dealing with different sets of standards.

The more troubling explanation is that the mix-up was deliberate in order to provide this opportunity for some sort of political statement as opposed to just rejecting the application from the beginning. That is also extremely cowardly. As is the failure to explain the material difference between this rescinded exemption and the other exemptions they approved (at least three).
Djokovic, who has said he is opposed to vaccination, had been granted by tennis authorities an unspecified medical exemption to play in the tournament.
But upon arrival at Melbourne Airport, the tennis player was unable to prove his medical exemption to the government's standards for entry.
"All I can say is that the evidence for medical exemption that was provided was found to be insufficient," Prime Minister Scott Morrison told reporters on Thursday.

When One cannot legally prove their medical exemption then obviously something was afoot when submitting their reasons of exemption to the "tennis authorities". Especially, as the tennis authorities have no say whether a person does or does not have a legal right to be granted a visa based on their judgement. It could have been a verbal assurance from Djokovic as to his medical status. Yes, The Australian Embassy should have fully scrutinized his exemption certificate prior to granting a visa. The fact is that the players themselves do not have to personally apply for such visas, hence the ATP very likely did so on his behalf. There should have been a better series of Protocols and Procedures in place based on the Covid-19 vaccine mandates / passports.
 

bver_hunter

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Nov 5, 2005
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Djokovic's only grounds for "Medical Exemption" was due to the fact that he tested positive for the virus last month. That was after he attended a Euro League Basketball game in a packed sports hall. He was seen hugging the players of both teams, and some who tested positive. In other words he did not have an exemption due to a personal medical issue, such as allergies to the vaccine components etc. Now if he loses his Court case and is deported, then he could be banned from visiting Australia for up to 3 years. His only line of defence to the Federals Strict Border Entry rules, is that it was approved by The Victoria State Government and the WTF Physician from Australia.

Court documents show Novak Djokovic had COVID-19 last month

 

Darts

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Jan 15, 2017
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Djokovic's only grounds for "Medical Exemption" was due to the fact that he tested positive for the virus last month. That was after he attended a Euro League Basketball game in a packed sports hall. He was seen hugging the players of both teams, and some who tested positive. In other words he did not have an exemption due to a personal medical issue, such as allergies to the vaccine components etc. Now if he loses his Court case and is deported, then he could be banned from visiting Australia for up to 3 years. His only line of defence to the Federals Strict Border Entry rules, is that it was approved by The Victoria State Government and the WTF Physician from Australia.

Court documents show Novak Djokovic had COVID-19 last month

That is twice we know of. How many other times has he been infected?

The guy has a wife and at least one kid. Are they safe?
 

bver_hunter

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Nov 5, 2005
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That is twice we know of. How many other times has he been infected?

The guy has a wife and at least one kid. Are they safe?
We have to wait and see after his Court case on Monday. Maybe he will get a pardon by the Court, due to The State of Victoria screwing up his Medical Status. Vaccine Exemptions due to Covid infections are not a valid reason for Entrance permits at Australian border Controls.
 

shack

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Oct 2, 2001
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On the day of his last positive diagnosis in Dec. and the day after, he attended 3 public events with no masks and no social distancing including one event where he handed out awards to a bunch of junior players (a separate picture for each) that looked about 10-12 years old.

He clearly does not give a shit about anybody.

I also heard that the Aussie gov't had asked the judge to delay Monday's hearing until Wed. but the judge declined. The point there is that the fact they even asked to have it delayed may indicate that the gov't may feel that they're on shaky ground.
 

Insidious Von

My head is my home
Sep 12, 2007
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Joker isn't entirely at fault here, the regional government of Victoria needs the money generated by the Oz Open.

They greased the wheels to get Novak into the Open under the Federal Government's nose. The Oz Embassy in Belgrade answers to the National Foreign Ministry which issued the red card. The regional authority figured they could get away with it since the NFL and NBA are allowing anit-vaxxers to play.
 
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rafterman

A sadder and a wiser man
Feb 15, 2004
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Judge orders Djokovic's visa to be reinstated and for him to be released within 30 minutes. I'm guessing the people will not be pleased wonder what sort of a reception he will receive as he walks onto the court (playing). If he wins the event that would really be poetic justice.

 
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shack

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Oct 2, 2001
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I don't think this story is over yet. It is quite possible, and maybe even likely, that a different ministry can reject his visa for different reasons.

I heard one report that if a head of a particular ministry personally rejects the visa, Novax would not be allowed in the the country for 3 years.

I think it depends how badly the PM wants to let the people of the country (who will be voting soon) see how serious he is that the rules apply to everybody. Even if he loses the battle, it would still look good to the electorate if he forces the issue.
 

Twister

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Aug 24, 2002
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He already had covid twice. He won in court, this time but he may still be kicked out. What's he going around without a mask if he was positive?

Djokovic pictured maskless at public event one day after positive Covid test

Novak Djokovic faced fresh controversy over his attempt to enter Australia to take part in the Open tennis tournament after pictures emerged on social media of his appearances at public events after a positive Covid test was recorded in mid-December, which allowed him an exemption from the country’s strict Covid rules.

Djokovic has spoken against vaccine mandates but has always refused to say what his own vaccination status is.

He has been kept in a Melbourne hotel since Thursday after his visa was cancelled due to problems with the medical exemption from vaccination granted by the organisers of the Australian Open.

Djokovic faces decision day on Monday as his appeal against the cancellation of his visa gets under way, after which he could be deported from the country.


According to court documents released on Saturday ahead of the hearing, Djokovic’s Covid-19 infection was recorded by the Institute of Public Health of Serbia on 16 December, which provided the basis for the medical exemption he received from the Tennis Australia and Victorian state government medical panels. He was granted his exemption on 30 December.

However, pictures on social media of Djokovic attending indoor events without a mask shortly after his Covid-19 test was recorded raise questions about Djokovic’s infection.

On 16 December, Djokovic attended an event commemorating his own personal stamp. Pictures were posted of Djokovic a day later at the Tennis Association of Belgrade for an award ceremony.

Djokovic was additionally pictured on the streets of Belgrade on 25 December despite Serbia’s rules requiring 14 days of self-isolation.

It is not clear if he knew he had Covid when the earlier pictures were taken.

Djokovic had attended a Euroleague basketball match between Red Star and Barcelona in Belgrade in the days before, during which numerous people present tested positive for Covid-19.

Djokovic’s PR team have told Serbian journalists that they will not be making any statements until after his case.

Since his visa was revoked in the early hours of Thursday morning and he was ordered to leave Australia, Djokovic has been detained in the Park hotel – an immigration detention hotel in Melbourne – as he awaits his hearing.

 
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