TENNIS world number one Novak Djokovic readied his legal guns on Sunday (9) for a battle to stay in Melbourne and defend his Australian Open title, arguing he has the all-clear because of a positive coronavirus test in December.
Djokovic's fight to overturn the shock cancellation of his visa and his ensuing detention in a notorious Melbourne immigration facility will culminate in a highly publicised online hearing in federal court on Monday (10).
The vaccine-sceptic Serbian star awaited the showdown holed up in the former Park Hotel, a five-storey facility that holds about 32 migrants trapped in Australia's hardline immigration system - some for years.
More than 100 protesters, many of them migrant rights activists, gathered in a park opposite the hotel.
"Free, free, the refugees," the crowd chanted as dozens of police stood by.
Large banners were sprawled on the ground, reading: "Justice for refugees", and "We send love to you every day". Some men held inside the hotel could be seen watching through the detention centre windows.
With eight days to go before the January 17 start of the Australian Open, any delay could dash the 34-year-old's hopes of winning his 10th crown in Melbourne, and a record 21st Grand Slam title.
In an order released to the public Sunday, Judge Anthony Kelly said the case will go ahead as scheduled at 10:00 am Monday (2300 GMT Sunday), refusing a government request to adjourn until Wednesday (12).
Djokovic's lawyers submitted a 35-page document on Saturday (8) arguing his visa was wrongly cancelled and should be reinstated, allowing him to compete.
The team has argued that Djokovic's positive PCR test on December 16, 2021 means he meets the criteria for a vaccine exemption under the guidance of Australia's own immunisation advisory body.
Tennis Australia cleared him for an exemption to play in the tournament, after his application was approved by two independent medical panels, his lawyers said.
'Incommunicado'
Australia's government, however, insists a recent coronavirus infection only counts as an exemption for residents, not for foreign nationals trying to enter the country.
Foreigners are still mostly banned from travel to Australia, and those granted entry must be fully vaccinated or have a medical exemption.
Despite Djokovic's claim of a positive test on December 16, pictures shared by the Belgrade tennis federation showed him at a young players' event in the city on December 17.
It reported that he had handed over cups and prizes to the best young players. No one was wearing a mask.
Djokovic had also attended another gathering on December 16, when the Serbian national postal service launched a series of stamps in his honour.
"Thank you to my generous country for this rare gift! I'm humbled!!," he said on Instagram at the time.
The tennis ace's lawyers argue that he faced an "unfair procedure", claiming Australian border agents held him for eight hours at Melbourne airport, mostly "incommunicado".
Djokovic had asked for time to rest and consult his lawyers but border agents successfully pressured him to allow them to take an immediate decision and cancel his visa, they said.
Since being moved into the Park Hotel detention centre, his pleas to be moved to another facility where he can train for the Australian Open have fallen on deaf ears, the lawyers said.
The centre holding him gained notoriety last year when a fire forced migrants to be evacuated, and maggots were allegedly found in the food.
'Gluten-free food'
Prime minister Ana Brnabic said this weekend that Serbia was fully behind the player and she had held "constructive talks" with Australian foreign minister Marise Payne.
"We managed that he gets gluten-free food, exercise equipment, a laptop," she told Serbia's Pink television.
In an internal video leaked on Saturday (8), Tennis Australia chief Craig Tiley said his organisation had done "everything they possibly could".
"There is a lot... of blaming going on but I can assure you our team has done an unbelievable job," he said in the footage published by the Sunday Herald Sun newspaper.
A second tennis player who was headed to the Australian Open - Czech doubles specialist Renata Voracova - had her visa was cancelled after initially being allowed into the country, her government has confirmed.
She flew out of Australia on Saturday night, an Australian government source said, after being held in the same Melbourne centre as Djokovic.
She described the experience to Czech media as being "a bit like in prison".
As much of Australia tightened restrictions to battle a wave of infections fuelled by the Omicron virus variant, the state of Victoria - of which Melbourne is the capital - reported 44,155 cases on Sunday (9).
Australian prime minister Scott Morrison has defended revoking Djokovic's visa, saying: "Rules are rules."
The federal judge hearing Djokovic's case warned his lawyers in a hearing on Thursday that justice would move at its own pace through all necessary appeals.
"The tail won't be wagging the dog here," he said.
Dr Malhotra, an advisor to US health secretary Robert F Kennedy's Make America Healthy Again (MAHA) Action, also serves as Chief Medical Advisor to Make Europe Healthy Again, where he campaigns for wider access to vaccine information.
Dr Aseem Malhotra, a British Asian cardiologist, and research psychologist Dr Andrea Lamont Nazarenko have called on medical bodies to issue public apologies over Covid vaccine mandates, saying they have contributed to public distrust and conspiracy theories.
In a commentary published in the peer-reviewed journal Science, Public Health Policy and the Law, the two argue that public health authorities must address the shortcomings of Covid-era policies and acknowledge mistakes.
They note that while early pandemic decisions were based on the best available evidence, that justification cannot continue indefinitely.
“Until the most urgent questions are answered, nothing less than a global moratorium on Covid-19 mRNA vaccines — coupled with formal, unequivocal apologies from governments and medical bodies for mandates and for silencing truth seekers — will suffice,” they write.
Dr Malhotra, an advisor to US health secretary Robert F Kennedy's Make America Healthy Again (MAHA) Action, also serves as Chief Medical Advisor to Make Europe Healthy Again, where he campaigns for wider access to vaccine information.
In the article titled Mandates and Lack of Transparency on COVID-19 Vaccine Safety has Fuelled Distrust – An Apology to Patients is Long Overdue, the authors write that science must remain central to public health.
“The pandemic demonstrated that when scientific integrity is lacking and dissent is suppressed, unethical decision-making can become legitimised. When this happens, public confidence in health authorities erodes,” they write.
They add: “The role of public health is not to override individual clinical judgment or the ethics that govern medical decision-making. This is essential because what once appeared self-evident can, on further testing, prove false – and what may appear to be ‘safe and effective’ for one individual may be harmful to another.”
The article has been welcomed by international medical experts who say rebuilding trust in public health institutions is essential.
“It might be impossible to go back in time and correct these major public health failings, which included support of futile and damaging vaccine mandates and lockdowns and provision of unsupported false and misleading claims regarding knowledge of vaccine efficacy and safety, but to start rebuilding public confidence in health authorities (is) the starting point,” said Dr Nikolai Petrovsky, Professor of Immunology and Infectious Disease, Australian Respiratory and Sleep Medicine Institute, Adelaide.
“This article is a scholarly and timely review of the public health principles that have been so clearly ignored and traduced. Without a complete apology and explanation we are doomed to pay the price for failure to take up the few vaccines that make a highly significant contribution to public health,” added Angus Dalgleish, Emeritus Professor of Oncology, St George’s University Hospital, UK.
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