China artist Ai Weiwei says passport returned after 4 years

Agence France-Presse
China artist Ai Weiwei says passport returned after 4 years
Ai on Wednesday publishes a photograph of himself clutching a red Chinese passport online, with the words: 'Today, I received a passport.'

BEIJING, China – Police handed Chinese dissident artist Ai Weiwei his passport on Wednesday, July 22, 4 years after it was confiscated, he told Agence France-Presse, hailing the move with a smiley emoticon.

Ai is China’s best known contemporary artist abroad, but authorities have denied him a passport since 2011 in an apparent attempt to limit his international influence.

The bearded conceptualist was detained for 81 days in 2011 amid a nationwide crackdown on dissent, with authorities continuing to hold the travel document after he was released.

But Ai on Wednesday published a photograph of himself clutching a red Chinese passport online, with the words: “Today, I received a passport.”

A photo posted by Ai Weiwei (@aiww) on


Confirming to Agence France-Presse that the photograph showed his own document, he responded to inquiries with a text message consisting of a smiley emoticon.

Police told him: “This is yours, we are returning it to you,” he added in another SMS.

It came 600 days after he started protesting over the issue by placing flowers in a bicycle basket outside his Beijing studio, leading to a long-running social media hashtag #flowersforfreedom.

Ai has continued to hold exhibitions overseas despite being unable to travel, last year designing a huge installation on the former prison island of Alcatraz near San Francisco.

The artist, who has released a heavy metal album and cites Marcel Duchamp as an inspiration, is known for making irreverent jokes.

Ai’s outspoken criticism of China’s ruling Communist party has seen his work censored domestically.

But last month authorities allowed his first solo exhibition in the country to open in  Beijing. It consisted of a reconstructed 400-year-old wooden ancestral hall.

The show lacked Ai’s usual political commentary, but the state-run Global Times newspaper in an editorial called on him to “change his politics”.

The son of a poet revered by China’s first generation of Communist leaders, Ai helped to design the Bird’s Nest Olympic Stadium for the 2008 Beijing Games, an event that brought the ruling party worldwide prestige.

But the burly artist’s outspoken criticism of China’s leaders – he has referred to them as “gangsters” – and involvement in controversial social campaigns went on to make him a thorn in the government’s side.

It is not clear whether having a passport means that Ai will be able to travel freely. Many Chinese dissidents have been detained at airports while trying to leave the country. – Rappler.com

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