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| Some restrictions on dissident artist Ai Weiwei ending; domestic travel restrictions lifted |
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Chinese dissident artist Ai Weiwei sits near a notice issued by the city's Chaoyang District police headquarters stating he will soon be freed from travel restrictions and other demands imposed following his three-month detention last year, at his house in Beijing, China Thursday, June 21, 2012. The notice issued Thursday said the year-old restrictions will expire Friday. AP Photo/Andy Wong.
By: Didi Tang and Isolda Morillo, Associated Press
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BEIJING (AP).- Dissident artist Ai Weiwei gained a bit of freedom Thursday when authorities said they would lift domestic travel restrictions imposed a year earlier, but he was still barred from leaving the country.
A notice from Beijing's Chaoyang District police headquarters that Ai received Thursday said his domestic travel restrictions will expire Friday, exactly a year after his release following nearly three months of detention. Ai, 55, had been the highest-profile target in a crackdown in spring 2011 to stop Chinese from imitating democratic uprisings in the Arab World. Despite the treatment, he remains an outspoken government critic.
Ai said police told him Thursday he cannot travel outside China because he remains under investigation on charges of pornography and illegal exchange of foreign currency, which Ai said are far-fetched.
Ai, known for his mocking, satirical art, was detained April 3, 2011, at Beijing's airport. Following his release on June 22 of that year, he was stripped of his passport and required to be constantly available for questioning.
Ai told The Associated Press on Thursday that the police would return his passport only on the condition that he not travel abroad.
"I feel this is still an illegal practice," said Ai, who has plans to travel to Washington D.C. later this year for an art exhibit, as well as several other foreign cities.
"If I am not allowed to leave the country, I will have to cancel the trips, but I will make some efforts," Ai said.
In the past year, Ai said he was required to report to the police weekly, stay away from the Internet and receive no foreigners, though he had ignored some of the restrictions.
Beijing police had asked him not to leave the capital over the past year but did not make the same request Thursday, Ai said.
He also said police instead of a blanket ban asked him Thursday not to accept interviews from foreign media "as much as possible." He swiftly defied that order, just as he did with earlier restrictions on giving interviews or posting comments online.
The easing of his restrictions is no reason for celebration, Ai said. "The string is always there, and I have no sense of security," Ai said. "There's no law to protect me, for there is no check on power in China."
Tang Jitian, a rights lawyer who was disbarred last year after he represented a member of the outlawed Falun Gong spiritual movement, said the lifting of the restrictions if not followed by harsher punishments likely means the police do not have sufficient evidence or legal ground to bring charges against Ai.
Ai is among dozens of rights activists, lawyers and others who have been detained, put under house arrest or disappeared in the past year and a half. Several of those who have been released have kept almost totally silent ever since.
Following Ai's release last year, his design company was presented with a 15 million yuan ($2.4 million) bill for back taxes and fines that he has contested.
A hearing on Ai's countersuit against the tax office was held Wednesday, though Ai was barred from attending.
The outcome of the countersuit was unclear, but Ai was not optimistic.
"The trial ended in a bureaucratic way," he said. "There was no decision on the verdict of the case, but I can expect the outcome to be far from ideal."
The authorities also have accused Ai of spreading pornography online and exchanging foreign money illegally.
The artist said the pornography charge stems from a naked photo of him and four netizens from two years ago. He said the photo was taken "for fun," though it has been interpreted as a political satire of the Chinese Community Party's rule.
Private exchange of foreign currency is common in China, though officially only banks can do that.
"Both are excuses for the police to assign me a crime and restrict my mobility," Ai said.
Copyright 2012 The Associated Press.
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