Novak Djokovic investigated for international offences over Covid-19, travel law-breaking
Novak Djokovic’s hellish start to 2022 now involves being investigated over international offences committed in three countries. We reveal what penalties – and jail time – he’s facing.
Novak Djokovic is under suspicion of committing a slew of international offences over his actions after he tested positive to Covid-19.
In some cases, he’s even admitted guilt.
Here’s what the world No.1 stands accused of and the heavy penalties he may face.
BREACHING ISOLATION
Djokovic tested positive to Covid-19 in a PCR test in Serbia at 8.19pm on December 16.
He claims to have only found out on December 17, after he spent the day handing out trophies to children at his tennis centre.
Under Serbian regulations, a person who receives a positive test must isolate for 14-days.
But Djokovic admits he breached isolation for an interview and photoshoot with French magazine L’Equipe on December 18 when he knew he had the virus.
PENALTY – Fine or up to 3 years prison
(Failure to Act Pursuant to Health Regulations During Epidemic, Serbian Criminal Code)
ENTERING SPAIN
Djokovic was seen training in Spain at the SotoTennis academy on December 31, following a negative PCR test in Serbia on December 22.
But Spain requires unvaccinated entrants to have a special exemption.
No proof of such an exemption seems to exist.
Spanish authorities are investigating.
PENALTY – Unknown
AUSSIE DECLARATION LIE
When Djokovic entered Australia in the early hours of January 6, he was required under new pandemic rules to fill out a travel declaration form.
On this form, Djokovic was asked if he had travelled within 14 days of flying to Australia.
He ticked, ‘no’.
But in a bombshell statement on January 12, the Serbian admitted this wasn’t true – he’d travelled from Serbia to Spain during that time – and blamed his agent.
“This was human error and certainly not deliberate,” he wrote.
PENALTY – 12 months jail
(Biosecurity Act)
GIVING FALSE EVIDENCE
Djokovic gave evidence to a court that he tested positive to Covid-19 on December 16.
But in the tennis star’s latest statement, he now claims to have only found out about his positive PCR test after he spent the day with children at his tennis centre on December 17.
Questions remain over the discrepancies between his affidavit to the Federal Circuit Court on January 10, and his public statement on January 12.
This could give rise to an offence of giving false evidence.
PENALTY – Five years jail
(Crimes Act)