Sunday Times

Lego admits it dropped a brick in cutting off artist

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LEGO billionair­e Kjeld Kirk Kristianse­n has admitted that the Danish toymaker’s refusal to sell bricks to dissident Chinese artist Ai Weiwei was a “mistake”.

The company found itself at the centre of a social media storm last year after Ai said Lego had refused his order of the famous children’s building blocks as they would be “used for political works”.

Lego’s deputy chairman, the grandson of the company’s founder and the worlds’ 65th richest man, said the decision to deny the artist a bulk order had been due to “an internal mistake”. The order, which Ai planned to use for a show in Australia, had been rejected “very low in the organisati­on by our consumer service department”, he told The Wall Street Journal.

In January, Lego said it would no longer ask what its bricks would be used for when making bulk sales, and that customers displaying their Lego creations in public would instead be asked to make it clear “that the Lego Group does not support or endorse the specific projects”.

Ai has been targeted by Chinese authoritie­s for his advocacy of democracy and human rights.

Meanwhile, the family-owned Lego group moved to hand over more power to fourth-generation heir Thomas Kirk Kristianse­n, who will take over from his father Kjeld as deputy chairman.

“I am very pleased to say that we are now ready to take certain important steps toward the smooth generation­al handover that will continue to maintain active family ownership of the Lego Group,” Kjeld Kirk Kristianse­n said.

His 37-year-old son will also replace him as chairman of the Lego Foundation, which owns 25% of the Lego Group. — AFP

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