Tennis star Novak Djokovic and his wife own an 80 percent share in a Danish biotech firm developing a treatment for COVID-19 that does not involve vaccination, the company’s boss said on Wednesday.
Loncarevic did not say how much the stake was worth but confirmed that Djokovic owns 40.8 percent while his wife owns 39.2 percent of the company.
Efforts to contact a Djokovic spokesperson for comment were unsuccessful.
QuantBioRes has about 12 researchers working in Denmark, Australia, and Slovenia, according to Loncarevic, and the company is developing a peptide that inhibits COVID-19 from infecting the human cell.
The CEO stressed that the company was working on a treatment and not a vaccine for COVID-19, and expects to launch clinical trials in Britain this summer, according to Loncarevic.
RRM is a “biophysical model based on findings that certain frequencies within the distribution of energies of free electrons along the protein are critical for protein biological function and interaction with protein receptors and other targets,” according to QuantBioRes.
These predictions can be used to help design treatments for viral diseases and resistant bacteria.
“With our innovative and insightful RRM technology, we strive to help humanity by developing treatment and cure for retroviruses and resistant bacteria,” the website states. “Our highly skilled team of biochemists, physicists, engineers, and programmers have worked tirelessly to bring QuantBioRes - QBR to the forefront of the industry.”
Djokovic flew out of Australia to his native Serbia on Jan. 17 after losing a legal challenge to overturn the cancellation of his visa by Australian Immigration Minister Alex Hawke.
The tennis player had contended that he should be allowed to stay in the country—which has some of the strictest COVID-19 protocols in place—and compete in the Australian Open tennis tournament under a medical exemption from the vaccination because he had tested positive for the virus in December.
The exemption had originally been granted by Tennis Australia and the Victorian government prior to his arrival in the country.
“This decision followed orders by the Federal Circuit and Family Court on 10 January 2022, quashing a prior cancellation decision on procedural fairness grounds,” Hawke said in a Jan. 14 statement. “In making this decision, I carefully considered information provided to me by the Department of Home Affairs, the Australian Border Force and Mr Djokovic. The Morrison Government is firmly committed to protecting Australia’s borders, particularly in relation to the COVID-19 pandemic.”