The Serbian Ministry of Foreign Affairs had earlier sent a protest note to the Australian Embassy in Belgrade,while the Serbian embassy in Canberra sent a protest note to the Australian Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade,according to the Serbian MFA press release.
A DFAT spokesperson confirmed the Australian ambassador attended a meeting with the Serbian foreign affairs secretary on Thursday.
"No further comment will be made given these matters are currently before the court."
Home Affairs Minister Karen Andrews on Friday rejected allegations from Djokovic that he was being held in “captivity” in Australia.
“Well,can I say firstly that Mr Djokovic is not being held captive in Australia. He is free to leave at any time that he chooses to do so,and Border Force will actually facilitate that,” Ms Andrews told the ABC.
The Age andThe Sydney Morning Herald revealed on Thursday that federal health authorities told Tennis Australia boss Craig Tiley ontwo occasions in writing that people who were not vaccinated and had contracted COVID-19 in the past six months would not be granted quarantine-free travel to Australia.
Ms Allan confirmed that Mr Tiley and Tennis Australia did not pass this advice onto the Victorian government.
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“I’m advised that the Victorian government,or members of the Victorian government,hadn’t seen that correspondence,” she said. “And you’d expect that we wouldn’t necessarily see that because it was correspondence between the Commonwealth government and Tennis Australia.”
The Acting Premier said the medical exemption provided to Djokovic by an independent panel,set up by the Victorian health department,gave him permission to play in the Australian Open once he was in Victoria. However,that permit would only have come into effect once Djokovic arrived in the country.
“You can only participate in the tournament if you’ve been granted the appropriate visa,and that’s very much a matter for the Commonwealth government,” she said.
Opposition leader Anthony Albanese said he didn’t understand why Djokovic’s visa was approved.
“I think,quite clearly,Mr Djokovic,given his statements of anti-vaxxer rhetoric,given the campaign that he ran very explicitly,for all to see,it was clear what his position was,” Mr Albanese said.
“How is it that a visa was ever granted in the first place?”
The visa that Djokovic arrived with was auto-generated online but he was required to prove he was eligible to enter the country once he landed in Australia.