The world's top-ranked men's tennis player is the top seed and defending champion at the Australian Open
Case to be heard today before Federal Court following an emergency hearing
Lawyers for Australian Immigration Minister Alex Hawke have agreed to not deport World number one men's singles tennis player Novak Djokovic from Australia.
Djokovic's lawyers are expected to appeal the cancelation in as they successfully did after the first cancellation.
As of Thursday night, there still was no resolution, although Djokovic's name was at the top of the men's bracket, with his No. 1 seeding intact.
Novak Djokovic was included in the draw for the Australian Open but he's still waiting to learn if he can stay in the country.
Djokovic remained in limbo even after he was included in the draw for the Australian Open, with the tennis star still awaiting a govt decision on whether to deport him for not being vaccinated
Australian PM Scott Morrison said he did not want to comment on Novak Djokovic's visa status
Novak Djokovic has acknowledged that his Australian travel declaration form contained incorrect information, as the government nears a decision on whether to deport the Serbian tennis star
The draw was to start at 3 p.m. local time (0400 GMT), but after a short delay, a tournament staffer told reporters outsde the media conference room it would not go ahead.
World no.1 tennis player Novak Djokovic is waiting to hear whether Australia will seek to cancel his visa for a second time.
The tennis star also blamed human error by his support team for failing to declare that he had traveled in the two-week period before entering Australia
Djokovic knew he'd tested positive for Covid-19 when he attended a newspaper interview and photo shoot last month, saying he made an error of judgment" and should have immediately gone into isolation
Novak Djokovic has moved to clarify how mistakes were made on the immigration document he submitted on his arrival in Melbourne last week, before his visa was revoked and then reinstated
The prime ministers of Australia and Serbia on Tuesday discussed Novak Djokovic's precarious visa after the top-ranked Serbian tennis star won a court battle to compete in the Australian Open
The ATP on Monday termed the saga surrounding World number one men's singles player Novak Djokovic as "damaging on all fronts".
The tennis star is--for now--free to defend his title at the Australian Open after a judge quashed the cancellation of his visa.
'Composition of current Covid vaccines may need to be updated, to ensure that vaccines continue to provide WHO-recommended levels of protection against infection,' says the body of independent experts
Novak Djokovic on Monday said he is 'pleased and grateful' that the judge has overturned his visa cancellation ahead of the Australian Open
Tennis star has been confined to a Melbourne hotel that detains refugees since Thursday after border officials overturned a Victoria state vaccine exemption.