Sport

RETURN OF SERB

Australian judge orders Djokovic be released from immigration detention – now ‘stakes have risen’

Australian judge orders Djokovic be released from immigration detention – now ‘stakes have risen’
Serbian tennis fans surround a car they believe contains Novak Djokovic on Collins Street in Melbourne, Australia on Monday. (Photo: Diego Fedele/Getty Images)

An Australian judge ruled on Monday that Novak Djokovic be released from immigration detention immediately, finding the government's decision to revoke the tennis star’s visa to enter the country was ‘unreasonable’.

Judge Anthony Kelly ordered Djokovic be freed within 30 minutes and his passport and other personal documents returned to him, rekindling the world No 1’s bid to win a record 21st Grand Slam title at the 2022 Australian Open.

Kelly, who earlier in proceedings had criticised the hours-long questioning of the Serb at Melbourne’s airport when he landed on Wednesday, said both the interview and the visa cancellation were “unreasonable”.

Djokovic was not given enough time to speak to tennis organisers and lawyers to respond fully after he was notified of the intent to cancel his visa, the judge said.

Lawyers for the federal government told the court the country’s immigration minister was reserving the right to exercise his personal power to again revoke Djokovic’s visa.

After confirming that such a step, if taken, would bar Djokovic from the country for three years, Kelly warned the government lawyers that “the stakes have now risen, rather than receded”.

Spokespeople for the minister, Alex Hawke, did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

Novak Djokovic fans protest against his detention on Flinders Lane in Melbourne, Australia on Monday. A judge has ordered that Djokovic be immediately released from detention. (Photo: Sam Tabone/Getty Images)

Djokovic’s plight has been closely followed around the world, creating political tensions between Belgrade and Canberra and sparking heated debate over national vaccination mandates.

Djokovic (34) has been held in an immigration detention hotel alongside long-term asylum seeker detainees since Thursday. He was at his lawyers’ chambers on Monday to hear the ruling, which included the government being ordered to pay his costs.

His lawyers argued that a recent Covid-19 infection qualified Djokovic for the medical exemption from a requirement for non-Australian citizens entering the country to be double vaccinated.

The Australian government, however, had argued non-citizens had no right of guaranteed entry to Australia and questioned his claimed exemption. DM/Reuters

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