18 November – the Australian government granted him a visa.
16 December – he “was tested and diagnosed with Sars-CoV-2”.
22 December – his second PCR test returned a negative result.
1 January – he authorised his agent to submit his travel declaration.
2 January – he received a border travel permit from the Victorian government.
4 January – he flew from Spain to Melbourne via Dubai.
5 January 11.30pm – he arrived in Melbourne.
6 January – his visa was cancelled.
All participants at the Australian Open, which starts on Jan 17
January 6 -- Djokovic is moved an immigration detention centre while his lawyers lodge an an appeal.
January 16
The Serbian loses his appeal in court and is deported from Australia. He says he's "extremely disappointed" and leaves on a flight bound for Dubai.
So he arrives to Melbourne at midnight on 1/5 (which means he arrived just as it became 1/6). Ten days later he is deported on 1/16.
indeed. a significant reason the minister denied the visa was, apparently, because djokovic's presence might encourage "anti-vaccination" sentiment within the Australian community.
Man, the echos of the Soviet Union in that are just creepy.
It's a strange timeline:
So he arrives to Melbourne at midnight on 1/5 (which means he arrived just as it became 1/6). Ten days later he is deported on 1/16.
Weird stuff!
indeed. a significant reason the minister denied the visa was, apparently, because djokovic's presence might encourage "anti-vaccination" sentiment within the Australian community.
Man, the echos of the Soviet Union in that are just creepy.
Face to face meetings are important in todays world. Maybe he just had to get some paperwork from Australia and return it to Serbia?
He is the Pamela Anderson of Julian Assange.
For 10 days? I don't think so.