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How did Djokovic get into the Australian Open?

A breakdown of the rules that led Novak Djokovic and a handful of other players to receive a medical exemption to play at the Australian Open

Photo by Andrej Isakovic/AFP

Novak Djokovic sparked anger after getting a medical exemption that will allow him to defend his Australian Open title without being vaccinated against COVID-19.

So how did the world number one do it? AFP Sport looks at the rules:

Who got an exemption?

The Serb is among a “handful” of players and support staff who gained a vaccine exemption allowing them to enter the country, according to Australian Open boss Craig Tiley.

But the medical reason for the vaccine-skeptic player obtaining the exemption has not been revealed.

“In this case an exemption was granted on grounds which are personal medical information, which we do not receive,” Craig Tiley told Australia’s Channel Nine television on Wednesday

“In this case an exemption was granted on grounds which are personal medical information, which we do not receive,” Tiley told Australia’s Channel Nine television on Wednesday.

“It is up to that applicant to disclose what those grounds were.”

How does it work?

A total 26 tennis players and support staff applied for exemptions, Tiley said.

These were examined by two panels in a system set up in agreement with the Victorian state government, according to the Australian Open, with players’ identities hidden from the medical panels.

A first panel of doctors decided whether applications abided by the exemption guidance of the government’s Australian Technical Advisory Group on Immunisation (ATAGI).

If they qualified, they were then examined by a second government-appointed panel of medical experts.

What illnesses are included?

These are the key reasons ATAGI sets out for allowing a temporary exemption from Australia’s COVID-19 vaccine requirements:

– Proof by PCR test that you have already had a COVID-19 infection. This allows you to defer vaccination for six months after the infection.

– A “major medical condition” such as major surgery or hospitalization for a serious illness.

– A “serious adverse event” to a previous COVID-19 vaccination, for example a reaction that is life-threatening or requires hospitalization—if there is no acceptable alternative vaccine available.

– People who are a risk to themselves or others during the vaccination process, for example because of a mental health disorder.

– For vaccines such as Pfizer or Moderna, proof of an inflammatory cardiac illness within the past three months.

Australian Open’s Craig Tiley said he could understand people being “completely upset” at the news of the exemption given to Novak Djokovic but insisted he had not been given special treatment

What is the reaction?

Tiley said he could understand people being “completely upset” at the news of Djokovic’s exemption but insisted he had not been given special treatment.

Anyone meeting the guidelines, including through proof of a recent COVID infection, was allowed to enter Australia, Tiley said.

“So there has been no special favor, there has been no special opportunity granted to Novak,” he added. Tiley argued that the rules were in fact stricter for tennis players than other people. “For tennis players, it was a process that goes above and beyond what anyone coming into Australia would have experienced,” he said.

“We had an extra panel, panel of experts, which through a blind review assessed any application and then granted exemptions if it was appropriate.”

© Agence France-Presse

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