Wellington: To people watching from afar, the treatment of tennis star Novak Djokovic by Australian immigration officials might have seemed harsh.
But Australia has long taken a severe stance on immigration, from the early days of its "White Australia" policy to its more recent practice of warehousing refugees in offshore detention camps. Many of its policies have been condemned by critics.
Djokovic, who is unvaccinated against the coronavirus, faces deportation from Australia after Immigration Minister Alex Hawke on Friday revoked his visa for the second time, citing health and good order considerations.
He isn't the first celebrity to face tough treatment.
British far-right commentator Katie Hopkins was deported from Australia last year after breaking quarantine rules. Back in 2007, American rapper Snoop Dogg was refused entry due to previous criminal convictions.
Read: Djokovic faces deportation after Australia revokes visa
And in 2015, Australian authorities threatened to euthanize Pistol and Boo, the Yorkshire Terrier dogs owned by actors Johnny Depp and Amber Heard, which had been snuck into the country on the couple's private jet. The dogs survived; the couple's romance did not.
Djokovic's saga began earlier this month when he arrived in Melbourne to play in the Australian Open, hoping to cement his place in history as the first man to win 21 Grand Slam tournaments.
But he ended up spending four nights confined to an immigration detention hotel after officials rejected his exemption to Australia's strict vaccination rules and canceled his visa.
On Monday, he won a court fight on procedural grounds that allowed him to stay and practice, before Hawke made his decision on Friday. Djokovic is expected to appeal but is running out of time and options.
Australia gives unusual authority to its immigration minister, which many refer to as the minister's "god powers." Hawke can essentially overrule the courts to deport people, with only narrow grounds for any appeals.
Kian Bone, a migration lawyer at Macpherson Kelley, said Djokovic might not have time to mount an effective appeal before he's due to play, forcing him to forfeit.
"Australia has always had highly codified and highly legislated immigration policies," Bone said.
"And compared to other countries, we confer extraordinary power to the minister of immigration."
Australia's modern history began with it as a recipient of harsh immigration policies, with Britain sending tens of thousands of criminals to Australian penal colonies for 80 years, before it stopped the practice in 1868.
When Australia formed its first federal government in 1901, one of its first orders of business was to pass the Immigration Restriction Act, which was designed to keep out people of color from Asia, the Pacific Islands and elsewhere.