Dissident artist Ai accepts Berlin post - Action News
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Dissident artist Ai accepts Berlin post

Chinese artist and government critic Ai Weiwei has accepted an offer to join the Berlin University of the Arts as a visiting lecturer, the German university has announced.

Faces hearing Thursday over tax evasion charges levied by Chinese authorities

Activist artist Ai Weiwei opens the gate of his home to talk to journalists after his outside his release in June. He is fighting charges of tax evasion, beginning with a hearing Thursday. (Ng Han Guan/Associated Press)

Chinese artist and government critic Ai Weiwei has accepted an offer to join the Berlin University of the Arts as a visiting lecturer, the German university has announced.

It is unclear when the outspoken artist will be able to take up his new position because of his legal situation in China.

Ai has been barred from travel outside Beijing for a year andfrom speaking publicly, under the terms of his release from prison onJune 22. He had spentnearlythree months in jail in a secret location.

Hearing on Thursday

Ai will appear at a hearing with Beijing tax adjudicators on Thursday overcharges he attempted to evade taxesand destroyed financial records.

His lawyer, Pu Zhiqiang, will challenge the$1.8-million tax bill authorities delivered to Ai after his release. Officials visited Ai's studio in late June and claimed his design company Beijing Fake Cultural Development Ltd. owed $770,000 in back taxes from the past decade and $1.1 million in fines.

Pu said he would demand proof of the alleged tax evasion from the Beijing Local Taxation Bureau on Thursday.

"Whether there are unpaid taxes or not, [it]requires the support of evidence in terms of facts regarding transactions and profits. We must first be clear about this question. But we haven't seen the specific proof and don't know where the financial records are now," Pu told the Associated Press.

Requests open hearing

He also called for Thursday's hearing be made open to the public. Ai may not be permitted to attend because only three people from his firm were allowed to be present his wife, who is the legal representative of the company, a lawyer and an accountant.

The artist'sfamily has deniedAi evaded taxes and said his arrest was a way of silencing him at a time when the Chinese government was cracking down on dissidents.

Berlin University firstreleased news ofthe job offer following Ai's arrest on tax fraud charges in April.

University president Martin Rennert said he hopes Ai will be able to take up the offer "in the near future."

Ai's outdoor installation inspired by Chinese zodiac sculptures opened in London while he was still in detention.

He is also known for helping design China's Bird's Nest stadium, for hisSunflower Seeds exhibitat London's Tate Modern, for his photographyand for his chronicle ofeach child killed in the Sichuan earthquake of 2008.

With files from The Associated Press