Britain's interior minister ordered officials today to grant Chinese dissident artist Ai Weiwei a six-month visa, reversing a decision to restrict him to a short trip that had prompted condemnation from rights groups.
Home Secretary Theresa May "was not consulted over the decision to grant Mr Ai a one-month visa", a spokeswoman for her department said.
"She has reviewed the case and has now instructed Home Office officials to issue a full six-month visa. We have written to Mr Ai apologising for the inconvenience caused."
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Ai is China's best known contemporary artist abroad but authorities denied him a passport for four years in an apparent attempt to limit his international influence.
After he finally received his passport last week, Germany granted him a four-year multiple entry visa but Ai said on Thursday that Britain had denied his request for a six-month visa and restricted him to a three-week trip because he did not declare a "criminal conviction".
Ai said he had "never been charged or convicted of a crime".
Jigme Ugen, head of a US-based Tibetan rights group, described the initial decision to grant Ai a shorter visa as "purely a kowtow to Xi Jinping's London visit".
Ai is currently in Germany, where he has a six-year-old son.