Novak Djokovic returned to a hero’s welcome in Serbia on Monday after Australia deported the world men’s tennis No. 1 for being unvaccinated against COVID-19, a stance jeopardizing his quest for a record 21st Grand Slam title.
Most Australians had wanted him gone, but Serbian supporters waved national flags and lauded him on arrival at Belgrade airport.
“You are our champion, Novak!” and “We love you, Nole!” they chanted, using his diminutive name.
But instead of beginning his title defence as scheduled at Melbourne Park, he flew to Belgrade via Dubai
after being twice detained in a hotel with asylum-seekers and then unceremoniously booted out by Australian immigration.
“Whoever wins it now, doesn’t really count,” said Alek Drakoo, a member of the Australian Serbian community, disappointed to miss seeing him in Melbourne.
The Australian government’s decision was in tune with majority public opinion, but authorities have been criticised for not resolving the issue before he arrived.
“I am uncomfortable that the focus of the past weeks has been on me and I hope that we can all now focus on the game and the tournament I love,” Djokovic said, expressing disappointment but respect for a court decision against him.
BACK TO AUSTRALIA?
Under Australian law, he cannot return for three years unless the immigration minister accepts there are compelling or compassionate reasons. Prime Minister Scott Morrison hinted there may be a way to let him in next year.
“There is the opportunity for (a person) to return in the right circumstances, and that will be considered at the time,” he told 2GB radio.
France said Djokovic would be barred from playing the French Open in May as things stand because of a new vaccine pass law.
“This will apply to everyone who is a spectator or a professional sportsperson,” the ministry said in a statement, adding, however, that the pandemic situation could change by then. “We’ll see, but clearly there’s no exemption.”
Australia’s Federal Court ruling to uphold the cancellation of Djokovic’s visa – originally granted on a medical exemption as he recently had COVID-19 – dismayed his family and supporters, who portray him as a persecuted underdog.
“I think he entered history as a hero, as a man and as a fighter against this evil which is called corona-circus,” said Marko Strugalovic, 60, at Belgrade airport.
“Nole, you are a king, you are an emperor, Nole is the greatest legend walking the earth, he is a living saint.”
Djokovic was first detained by immigration authorities on Jan. 6, ordered released by a court on Jan. 10 and then detained again on Saturday before Sunday’s court hearing.
He wore a mask and took selfies with fans as he arrived in Dubai from Melbourne, before taking a terminal buggy to the departure gate for a six-hour flight to Belgrade. Once home, he avoided the crowd of fans and media, going straight to his luxury apartment in Belgrade’s Novi Beograd district.
Australian Immigration Minister Alex Hawke had said Djokovic could be a threat to public order because his presence would encourage anti-vaccination sentiment.
His case has stoked a passionate global debate over the rights to decline vaccination as authorities around the world push that as the main route out of the two-year-old pandemic.
'YOU HAVE TO COMPLY'
Many Australians, who have endured some of the world’s toughest lockdowns and have an adult vaccination rate of more than 90 per cent, saw him as arrogant and dismissive of health risks.
The controversy became a political touchstone for Morrison who faces an election by May, amid wrangling over responsibility between his centre-right federal coalition government and the centre-left Victoria state government.
Morrison defended his handling of the situation and differentiated Djokovic’s case from vaccine sceptics within his own government. “If you’re someone coming from overseas, and there are conditions for you to enter this country, then you have to comply with them,” he said.
Spain’s Nadal said the tournament would not be the same without his great rival.
“If Novak Djokovic is playing here, it’s better for everybody, no doubt about that,” he told reporters after
trouncing American Marcos Giron 6-1 6-4 6-2 to sail into the second round.
(Reporting by Ivana Sekularac, Aleksandar Vasovic, Fedja Grolovic, Branko Filipovic and Chris Pike in Belgrade; Sudipto Ganguly and Ian Ransom in Melbourne; Loren Elliott in Melbourne and Dubai; Alexander Cornwell in Dubai; Jane Wardell in Sydney; Julien Pretot in Paris; Writing by Andrew Cawthorne; Editing by Jon Boyle and Timothy Heritage)