Sabtu, 08 Januari 2022

Djokovic tells court he was cleared to enter Australia after COVID-19 - CNA

SYDNEY: Tennis world number one Novak Djokovic mounted his legal challenge on Saturday (Jan 8) to being refused entry to Australia, saying he had immigration clearance to enter the country after contracting COVID-19 last month.

On his third day in immigration detention in Melbourne, the Serbian superstar's court filing confirms widespread speculation he had caught the coronavirus. It escalates a furore over Australia's handling of a medical exemption from the country's vaccination rules that has rocked world tennis.

Djokovic, a vocal opponent of vaccine mandates hoping to win his 21st Grand Slam at the Australian Open, has been holed up since Thursday in a modest Melbourne hotel after his visa was cancelled due to problems with the exemption.

The drama has become a diplomatic issue, as Serbia says Australia is treating Djokovic as a prisoner. It has also become a flashpoint for opponents of vaccine mandates around the world.

His filing, ahead of a court hearing on Monday over his visa cancellation, says Djokovic had received the exemption from tournament organiser Tennis Australia, with a follow-up letter from the Department of Home Affairs saying he was allowed into the country.

"I explained that I had been recently infected with COVID in December 2021 and on this basis I was entitled to a medical exemption in accordance with Australian Government rules and guidance," Djokovic says in the filing about his experience being detained at Melbourne Airport.

Djokovic says he told Australian Border Force "officers that I had correctly made my Australian Travel Declaration and otherwise satisfied all necessary requirements in order to lawfully enter Australia on my visa.".

Djokovic returned his first positive COVID-19 test on Dec 16 but by Dec 30 "had not had a fever or respiratory symptoms of COVID-19 in the last 72 hours", the filing says. On Jan 1, it says, he received a document from Home Affairs telling him his responses indicated he met "the requirements for a quarantine-free arrival into Australia".

The federal court has ordered Home Affairs to file its response by Sunday. The Border Force, a unit of Home Affairs, did not respond to a Reuters request for comment on Saturday.

The Australian Open starts on Jan 17.

Many countries allow a recent COVID-19 infection as a reason for an exemption from vaccine requirements, but Australia's federal government released a letter soon after Djokovic arrived showing that it had notified Tennis Australia that was not necessarily the case in the country.

The federal and Victorian state governments and Tennis Australia have denied responsibility for the dispute.

Czech player Renata Voracova, who was also detained in the same detention hotel as Djokovic and had her visa revoked after issues with her exemption, was seen by reporters leaving the hotel in a van on Saturday evening.

Her destination was not immediately clear, but she told Czech media earlier that she was still waiting to leave the country after deciding not to appeal the decision.

"NOT MISLED"

Djokovic's court filing confirms a media report that he asked to be moved to lodgings with access to a tennis court but that his request was denied. The Park Hotel, where he is staying, is also home to dozens of asylum seekers trying to enter the country.

The feted sportsman expressed "shock", "surprise" and "confusion" when he was held overnight, and had a bed prepared near his airport interview room so he could rest while waiting until the morning when he would be able to reach legal representatives and Tennis Australia, the filing says.

Customs officers ultimately "pressured" Djokovic to undertake an interview before he had spoken to either, the filing says.

Tennis Australia said it never knowingly misled players and had always urged players to be vaccinated, after News Corp papers published a document from the organising body apparently advising players on ways to enter the country with a medical exemption from vaccination.

"We have always been consistent in our communications to players that vaccination is the best course of action - not just as the right thing to do to protect themselves and others, but also as the best course of action to ensure they could arrive in Australia," Tennis Australia said in a statement quoted by local media.

"We reject completely that the playing group was knowingly misled."

Tennis Australia's advice was based on the contents of a federal government website to which it had been referred by the federal health minister, the statement added.

Tennis Australia did not respond to Reuters requests for comment.

The group's information sheet, as published by News Corp, said players could enter the country with an "overseas medical exemption" that had been "reviewed by an Australian medical practitioner" then entered on a central database.

The document was distributed to players last month, News Corp reported. But the federal government released a letter showing it wrote to Tennis Australia in November saying that prior infection with COVID-19 was not necessarily grounds for exemption in Australia, as it was elsewhere.

Tennis Australia CEO Craig Tiley defended the organisation's actions, according to a video that emerged on Saturday.

In an address to Tennis Australia staff, uploaded to News Corp websites, Tiley said he would tell the full story about the saga but was constrained because Djokovic was challenging his visa cancellation in court.

"We've chosen at this point not to be very public with it and simply because there is a pending lawsuit related to entry into Australia," he said in the video.
 

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2022-01-08 07:49:00Z
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Djokovic faces a third day in Australian migrant detention in COVID-19 vaccine furore - CNA

The Australian newspaper reported that Djokovic had requested access to his chef and a tennis court while in detention but that his request was denied.

As the Australian Border Force said it had cancelled several other visas of people involved in the tournament, including Voracova's, the federal and Victorian state governments and Tennis Australia denied responsibility for the dispute, which has been condemned by the Serbian government.

After News Corp papers published a document from Tennis Australia apparently advising players on ways to enter the country with a medical exemption from vaccination, the organising body said it never knowingly misled players and had always urged players to be vaccinated.

"We have always been consistent in our communications to players that vaccination is the best course of action — not just as the right thing to do to protect themselves and others, but also as the best course of action to ensure they could arrive in Australia," Tennis Australia said in a statement quoted by local media.

"We reject completely that the playing group was knowingly misled."

Tennis Australia's advice was based on the contents of a federal government website to which it had been referred by the federal health minister, the statement added.

Tennis Australia did not respond to Reuters requests for comment.

The group's information sheet, as published by News Corp, said players could enter the country with an "overseas medical exemption" that had been "reviewed by an Australian medical practitioner" then entered on a central database.

The document was distributed to players last month, News Corp reported. But the federal government has said it wrote to Tennis Australia in November saying that prior infection with COVID-19 was not necessarily grounds for exemption in Australia, as it was elsewhere.

Tennis Australia CEO Craig Tiley defended the organisation's actions in a video that emerged on Saturday.

In an address to Tennis Australia staff, uploaded to News Corp websites, Tiley said he would tell the full story about the saga but was constrained because Djokovic was challenging his visa cancellation in court.

"We would like to share with you all the information, and we will," he said in the video.

"We've chosen at this point not to be very public with it and simply because there is a pending lawsuit related to entry into Australia. Once that has run its course, we'll be able to share more.

"There is a lot of finger-pointing going on and a lot of blaming going on, but I can assure you our team has done an unbelievable job and have done everything they possibly could according to all the instructions they have been provided."

Djokovic, 34, has not revealed the grounds for his exemption and has consistently refused to disclose his vaccination status. Vaccines are not mandatory in Australia but are required for some activities.

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2022-01-08 02:14:00Z
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Jumat, 07 Januari 2022

Commentary: Netflix's Don't Look Up sounds warning bells over climate change denial - CNA

MYTH #4: THE ECONOMY IS MORE IMPORTANT THAN ANYTHING ESLE

Taking action to slow climate change will be expensive, but not acting has extraordinary costs – in lives lost as well as property.

Consider the costs of recent Western wildfires. Boulder County, Colorado, lost nearly 1,000 homes to a fire on Dec 30, 2021, after a hot, dry summer and fall and almost no rain or snow.

A study of California’s fires in 2018 – another hot, dry year – when the town of Paradise burned, estimated the damage, including health costs and economic disruption, at about US$148.5 billion.

When people say we can’t take action because action is expensive, they are in denial of the cost of inaction.

MYTH #5: OUR ACTIONS SHOULD ALWAYS ALIGN WITH OUR SOCIAL IDENTITY

In a politically polarised society, individuals may feel pressured to make decisions based on what their social group believes.

In the case of beliefs about science, this can have dire consequences – as the world has seen with the COVID-19 pandemic.

In the US alone, more than 825,000 people with COVID-19 have died while powerful identity groups actively discourage people from getting vaccines or that could protect them.

Viruses are oblivious to political affiliation, and so is the changing climate. Rising global temperatures, worsening storms and sea level rise will affect everyone in harm’s way, regardless of the person’s social group.

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2022-01-07 22:00:48Z
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France says Djokovic will be allowed to play at Roland Garros - CNA

Sports minister Roxane Maracineanu said International Tennis Federation protocols at major events meant an unvaccinated player would be entitled to enter France and participate in Roland Garros, which begins in May.

As the Omicron variant drives a surge in COVID-19 around the world, public frustration has mounted towards unvaccinated people in France and elsewhere. President Emmanuel Macron this week said he wanted to "piss off" the unvaccinated by making their lives difficult to spur them into getting the shot.

Macron's opponents accused him of using language ill-suited to a president and seeking to bolster his credentials ahead of April's election, although analysts said his words would resonate with many people.

Djokovic, 34, has consistently refused to disclose his vaccination status, while publicly criticising mandatory vaccines. He has not revealed the grounds for the exemption.

"He would not follow the same organisational arrangements as those who are vaccinated," Maracineanu told FranceInfo radio. "But he will nonetheless be able to compete (at Roland Garros) because the protocols, the health bubble, allows it."

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2022-01-07 12:22:00Z
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6G mobile transmission technology that's 100 times faster than 5G reached in Chinese lab - South China Morning Post

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2022-01-07 08:21:07Z
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Three others at Australian Open have Djokovic exemption - source - CNA

MELBOURNE : At least three other participants in the Australian Open with the same medical exemption as Novak Djokovic are already in the country with more potentially arriving over the next week, a source told Reuters on Friday.

Djokovic was spending the Orthodox Christmas in detention on Friday having had his visa cancelled on arrival in Australia when officials ruled his documentation was insufficient to allow him entry to the country while unvaccinated.

The political fallout, both domestically and abroad, intensified overnight as Djokovic's legal team prepared documents aimed at extending his stay after a Federal court hearing in Melbourne on Monday.

The 20-times Grand Slam winner might not be the only person hoping to take part in the Australian Open to face removal from the country, however.

Home Affairs Minister Karen Andrews has confirmed the Australian Border Force is assessing the credentials of two others who entered the country under the same exemption granted to Djokovic. 

A source familiar with the matter told Reuters that a third participant in the Grand Slam also entered Australia on the same framework, which had been put in place by Tennis Australia and the Victoria State government.

Exemptions may also have been granted to players or officials who are yet to arrive in Australia, the source added.

While the tournament proper begins on Jan. 17, ITF Junior events and wheelchair tournaments are set to begin next week, so too the qualifying events for the Australian Open.

TA has not commented on the matter since Djokovic was initially detained at Melbourne Airport shortly after 11 p.m. on Wednesday.

Tournament director Craig Tiley, who is also the TA chief executive, defended the medical exemption granted to Djokovic prior to his detention.

Srdjan Djokovic, the detained player's father, has claimed more than 20 exemptions were handed out to tennis participants prior to the Australian Border Force's intervention.

Tiley said this week 26 claims for exemptions had been lodged, but only a "handful" had been approved.

Djokovic's legal team of Nick Wood and Paul Holdenson is expected to file further documents on Saturday supporting the nine-times Australian Open champion's bid for an injunction to delay his departure.

Justin Quill, a partner with Thomson Geer who specialises in media law, said Djokovic might be able to play the Australian Open even while his challenge to the deportation decision proceeds.

He said if Djokovic's interim injunction was successful, the hearing into the matter proper was likely to be listed for a date falling well after the completion of the tournament on Jan. 30.

"When you look at interlocutory injunctions, you have to clear two things," Quill told Reuters.

"You have to demonstrate there is an arguable case with reasonable grounds. If Djokovic gets over that first hurdle, the next thing is Balance of Convenience.

"This is where you balance the scales in regards to the imposition on each party and who will be hindered more if their rights are wrongly denied."

Quill said he believed the Balance of Convenience could favour Djokovic.

"If it turns out the Home Affairs Minister is right and he ultimately wins the case, they can deport Djokovic then. It doesn't really impact the minister too much,” Quill said.

"If it turns out Novak is right and that they never had the right to deport him, he can’t get back the chance at the 2022 Australian Open. He can’t get back his attempt to go down as the greatest ever grand slam winner in history."

(Editing by Stephen Coates)

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2022-01-07 06:29:24Z
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Kamis, 06 Januari 2022

Pregnant woman loses baby after Xi'an hospital denies her entry due to expired Covid-19 test - The Straits Times

BEIJING (BLOOMBERG) - China has fired medical chiefs after a pregnant woman lost her baby outside a hospital that denied her entry due to Covid-19 controls, as officials in the central city of Xi'an face scrutiny for their strict lockdown measures.

The woman, who was eight months pregnant, was turned away from Gaoxin Hospital on Jan 1 because her Covid-19 test had expired by four hours, according to a post on Tuesday written by someone claiming to be the woman's niece.

A video posted the same day, showing what appeared to be a woman bleeding on the sidewalk outside a hospital in Xi'an's Gaoxin district, became a trending topic on a micro-blogging platform.

Two hospital department heads were fired and a general manager was suspended, the Xi'an government announced in a Thursday (Jan 6) statement.

An investigation that concluded on Wednesday determined that the incident was an "accident caused by negligence", the release said, and ordered the hospital to compensate and apologise to the woman.

The city's health commission chief Liu Shunzhi also received a warning from the Communist Party for malpractice in emergency treatment.

Xi'an is currently battling the country's worst Covid-19 outbreak since the start of the pandemic, having reported more than 1,700 cases in a month.

The lockdown has banned its more than 13 million residents from leaving their homes without a special reason, triggering shortages of food and medical care.

This has led to social media posts criticising the government - a rarity in the nation.

Two lower-level officials have already been dismissed in Xi'an to "strengthen epidemic prevention and control", the government said on Monday.

Earlier this week, the health code system that strictly controls people's movements crashed, prompting the suspension of the head of the local big-data bureau, according to a local Communist Party body.

China is one of the very few countries left practising a zero-tolerance Covid-19 strategy that relies on strict border controls, extensive testing and lockdowns to bring infections to zero.

While the Xi'an outbreak is of the Delta variant, the more transmissible Omicron strain now roiling the world poses a further challenge to that approach.

Mainland China has not yet reported community spread of Omicron.

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2022-01-06 04:20:46Z
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