Same rules used to deport Novak Djokovic could be used to deny Kanye West a visa
Prime Minister Scott Morrison has issued a blunt warning to Kanye West after the Novak Djokovic saga.
Kanye West’s plan to bring his stadium tour to Australia is facing another roadblock as questions mount if the rapper can even obtain a visa to enter the country.
The artist, who has 22 Grammys to his name, is said to be planning to bring his Donda tour down under, in a move that could prove lucrative to the hard hit entertainment industry.
But the star’s outspoken anti-vaccination views, in addition to his unknown vaccination status, could mean his visa is denied under the same rules used to deport Novak Djokovic.
Prime Minister Scott Morrison said recent events proved the rules applied to everyone.
“The rules are you have to be fully vaccinated. Those are the rules. They apply to everybody, as people have seen most recently,” he told reporters on the Sunshine Coast.
“It doesn't matter who you are, they are the rules. Follow the rules, you can come. You don’t follow the rules, you can’t.”
Mr Djokovic was deported in dramatic circumstances on the eve of the Australian Open, after Immigration Minister Alex Hawke used his discretionary powers to deny him a visa.
In a statement to the world No. 1’s lawyers, the minister cited the unvacated tennis star’s presence in Australia could excite anti-vaccination sentiment.
While lawyers for Mr Djokovic argued his recent Covid-19 infection was the reason he was not vaccinated, Mr Hawke said his anti-vaccination views were enough to refuse his visa.
Under Australia’s current border rules, a foreign citizen must be fully vaccinated or have a valid medical exemption to enter the country.
Last year, Mr West confirmed he had only received one dose of the vaccine and he had to travel to Paris via Portugal to circumvent France’s tough vaccination rules.
“I travelled to Paris a couple weeks ago, and I had to go through Lisbon because you can go through Lisbon without being vaccinated,” he told Drunk Champs.
“I only got one of the shots, so I’m half-ccinated.”
In 2020, Mr West told Forbes although he had previously contracted Covid, he believed the vaccine was the mark of the devil.
“When they say the way we’re going to fix Covid is with a vaccine, I’m extremely cautious. That’s the mark of the beast,” he said at the time.
“They want to put chips inside of us, they want to do all kinds of things, to make it where we can’t cross the gates of heaven.”
The visa roadblock is just another blow for the star, whose request for the AFL to move an opening round fixture between St Kilda and Collingwood at Marvel Stadium to another venue so he could perform there failed.