Your Monday Briefing: Djokovic Leaves Australia


Good morning. We’re covering Djokovic’s forced departure from Australia, ongoing tensions between Russia and the West and the Cambodian government’s tightening of internet surveillance.

The unvaccinated Serbian tennis superstar left Australia on Sunday night after a court ruled against his bid to stay, costing him a chance at a 10th Australian Open title and a record-breaking 21st Grand Slam title.

In a unanimous decision, the court ruled that Australia’s immigration minister was within his rights to cancel Novak Djokovic’s visa for a second time on the basis that the player could pose a risk to public health and order. (Here’s an explainer on the case.)

Djokovic could be barred from entering Australia for the next three years under its laws regarding visa cancellations. He could face further international travel challenges if he does not get vaccinated.

Tennis: The Australian Open will begin on Monday with a vacuum at the top — Djokovic has won its last three men’s singles championships.

Serbia: President Aleksandar Vucic blasted Australia’s legal process as “Orwellian” and said Djokovic would be welcomed home.

Australia: Some legal experts called for changes to the immigration minister’s “godlike” powers. Djokovic lost to public outcry and “a government determined to make him a symbol of unvaccinated celebrity entitlement,” our Sydney bureau chief writes in an analysis.

Here are the latest updates and maps of the pandemic.

In other developments:


Last week’s diplomatic marathon did not defuse the security crisis that Moscow has ignited in Eastern Europe. Ukraine remains surrounded on three sides by 100,000 Russian troops.

And on the sidelines of the talks, Russia issued more subtle but wide-ranging threats.

Vladimir Putin, the Russian leader, wants to extend Russia’s sphere of influence to Eastern Europe and secure written commitments that NATO will never again enlarge. Russian officials have hinted that Moscow could take measures like placing nuclear missiles close to the U.S. coastline, if the West fails to meet its security demands.

U.S. officials are threatening to throw their weight behind a Ukrainian insurgency should Russia invade. On Friday, the White House accused Moscow of sending saboteurs to stage an incident in Ukraine to create a pretext for invasion.

Cyber conflict: On Saturday, Microsoft said it had detected highly destructive malware in Ukraine that appeared to be waiting to be triggered by an unknown actor. On Friday, hackers brought down several Ukrainian government websites.

Analysis: After years of drift, Trumpian ridicule and failure in Afghanistan, NATO stands united once again in its longstanding goal of containing Russia.


A new law will allow the authorities to monitor the web by forcing all internet traffic — including from abroad — to route through a government portal.

Even though free speech is enshrined in the Constitution, government surveillance is high in Cambodia. Each ministry monitors the web and reports offending content to an internet crime unit in the Ministry of Interior.

Rights groups say that the new law will make surveillance even easier, and that the crackdown on digital expression is about to get worse. Recently, dozens have been sent to jail for posting jokes, poems, pictures, private messages and songs.

Analysis: Cambodia has become the latest country in the region to embrace China’s authoritarian internet surveillance. Critics say the rule will deepen the clash over the future of the web.

Asia

In his latest “Close Read,” our critic Jason Farago explores “In Memory of My Feelings — Frank O’Hara,” a 1961 painting by the American artist Jasper Johns. “I want to show you my favorite Johns painting,” Jason writes, “one that first appears as impersonal as any other — and which, slowly, delivers a roundhouse of passion and pain.”

Maria Abi-Habib, The Times’s bureau chief for Mexico, Central America and the Caribbean, wrote about the impact of growing up in Lebanon during the country’s civil war. Here’s a taste of her moving essay.

When you’re a child, how do you get through a war?

A lot of Monopoly, Scrabble, card games, candles and windowless bathrooms turned into family bomb shelters.

Some of those same crutches used to make it through a childhood scarred by conflict — like endless board games — are now a source of trauma for me and my friends. We grew up during Lebanon’s civil war and are now adults trying to live normal lives, raising our own families as the country crashes and burns yet again.

For my generation, emotional minefields can surround the most mundane activities even 32 years since the war ended.

“I don’t do well in romantic settings,” said my friend Nadine Rasheed, a 40-year-old product developer who now lives in New York. “Candles give me anxiety. We spent so much time studying by candlelight after school.”

The crisis in Lebanon has meant households are once again stockpiling candles and board games. Reminders of a past war are now staples of the present decay.



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