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Novak Djokovic driven to court for last-ditch fight against deportation hours before start of Australian Open

NOVAK Djokovic has been driven to court for his last-ditch appeal showdown over his visa as he battles to play in the Australian Open.

The 34-year-old tennis star faces a humiliating deportation and even being frogmarched to the airport under armed guard if his final appeal is unsuccessful.

Novak Djokovic has been driven to court for his last minute visa appeal
The 34-year-old faces being deported from Australia

He was snapped donning a white mask and looking tense as he was whisked off to meet with his legal team ahead of the court hearing, which began at 10.30pm GMT (9.30am in Oz).

Immigration Minister Alex Hawke used his powers to cancel Djokovic’s visa on “health and good order” grounds and overturn an earlier successful appeal.

He argued the star’s presence in Australia could trigger rallies and “civil unrest” and also encourage its citizens to not get vaccinated against Covid.

Hawke said he accepted Djokovic’s recent Covid infection meant he was a “negligible risk to those around him” – but he was “perceived by some as a talisman of a community of anti-vaccine sentiment”.

He said: “I consider that Mr Djokovic’s ongoing presence in Australia may lead to an increase in anti-vaccination sentiment generated in the Australian community, potentially leading to an increase in civil unrest of the kind previously experienced in Australia with rallies and protests which may themselves be a source of community transmission.”

The minister noted in the court documents Djokovic was a “person of influence and status”.

He expressed concern that the tennis player’s “ongoing presence in Australia may encourage other people to disregard or act inconsistently with public health advice and policies in Australia”.

It comes after chaos erupted following claims Djokovic was arrested after his anti-vaxx court win, with cops firing pepper-spray at fans.

? Read our Novak Djokovic live blog for the latest updates

Pictures show tumultuous scenes as fuming supporters of the tennis ace swarmed a car leaving his lawyer’s office as police battled to move them on.

Hundreds of outraged Djokovic supporters formed huge crowds outside his lawyer’s office in Melbourne as groups blocked a car they believed to be carrying the tennis star.

Fans clashed with police who used pepper-spray in a bid to control them as they chanted Djokovic’s nickname and hurled bottles as tensions escalated.

Fears are mounting over further riots after Djokovic arrived at Melbourne’s Park Hotel – the same immigration detention centre where he was held last week – just before 3.30pm on Saturday (4.30am UK time).

A dozen refugee activists chanted “stop the torture… let them out” as the tennis star and Border Force guards drove into the underground car park of the hotel.

It will be a second stint in detention for Djokovic, who spent his first four nights in Australia in the hotel before a judge freed him on Monday.

Djokovic met with immigration officials and Border Force earlier on Saturday for a secret showdown at an undisclosed location before he was hauled back to the hotel once again.

POTENTIAL THREE-YEAR BAN

The saga over anti-vaxxer Djokovic’s jab status began when his visa was revoked when he first landed Down Under on January 5.

Australian border Force officials said he had “failed to provide appropriate evidence” to receive a vaccine exemption.

The star spent hours a the airport and then spent days at an immigration hotel.

But the latest twist saw the Australian government revoke his visa again, overturning a successful appeal that saw him released from detention.

During a special night time court hearing on Friday, his legal team immediately launched a desperate last minute bid for him to stay in the country.

Djokovic’s lawyers said they would argue his deportation would only further fan anti-vaxx sentiment – and would be as much a threat to public health as letting him stay and exempting him from Australia’s vaccine requirement.

Judge Anthony Kelly has ordered the federal government not take any steps to remove the star from Australia before his appeal is resolved.

If successful, Djokovic could be playing fellow Serb Miomir Kecmanovic in the first round of the Australian Open, which begins on Monday and for which he is the number one seed.

If he loses his appeal and is deported then he would banned from Australia for three years.

He will be 37 by the time he is able to return to the the country and play in the Australian Open.

The nine-time Australian Open winner was hoping to defend his title next week.

If he won it would make him the most successful male tennis player in history with a record 21 Grand Slam titles.

Melbourne-based immigration lawyer Kian Bone said Djokovic’s lawyers would now need to get two urgent orders for him to stay and play.

One order would be an injunction preventing his deportation, such as what he won in court last week.

The second would force Hawke to grant Djokovic a visa to play.

“They are keeping him like a prisoner, it’s just not fair, it’s not human.”

If the court rules his deportation from Australia, Djokovic faces being escorted to the plane by armed cops.

According to the gotocourt legal website, if an application to stay is refused then a person will be arrested and removed from Australia.

“Unless you leave voluntarily, you will be arrested and removed from Australia,” writes lawyer Michelle Makela on the website.

Djokovic could also be jailed after admitting he broke Serbian isolation rules after testing positive for Covid in December.

In a lengthy statement, Djokovic admitted he defied rules and took part in a photo shoot and interview with French newspaper L’Equipe in an “error of judgement”.

He confessed that he met with a journalist two days after he tested positive in Belgrade, before his arrival Down Under.

The sports star posed maskless for a photo shoot, but says he wore a face covering for the rest of the meeting.

He claims he felt “obliged” to fulfil the interview arrangement as he “didn’t want to let the journalist down”, but has admitted he should have “rearranged”.

Under Serbian law, breaking Covid rules can result in a jail sentence of up to three years.