During the 20-minute meeting, Taslima requested the Home Minister that she be allowed to stay in India for a longer period, official sources said.
The 51-year-old writer had applied for a resident permit and the Home Ministry granted her the same type of visa but only for two months beginning August 1.
"I met Honourable Home Minister Rajnath Singhji this afternoon. Gave him my book 'Wo Andhere Din'. He said,'Aapka Andhere Din Khatam Ho Jayega' (Your dark days will end)," Taslima tweeted after her meeting.
After the verification process is completed, the government will take an appropriate decision, a Home Ministry official said.
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The controversial writer from Bangladesh has been living in self exile since 1994 in the wake of death threats by Muslim fundamentalist outfits.
Taslima is now a citizen of Sweden. She has been continuously getting Indian visa since 2004.
She has lived in the US, Europe and India in the last two decades. However, on many occasions she had expressed her wish to live in India permanently, especially in Kolkata.