Excerpt:
Geert Wilders, the far-right Dutch politician who was prevented from entering Britain because he was a threat to "community harmony", has won his appeal against the ban.
The Freedom Party MP, who is an outspoken critic of Islam, called today's ruling by the Asylum and Immigration Tribunal "a triumph for freedom of speech" and said that he would visit the UK soon.
Jacqui Smith, then the Home Secretary, issued a prohibition order in February after Mr Wilders was deemed to pose a threat to public order. He was due to show a short film called Fitna, which criticises the Koran as a "fascist book", at the House of Lords. The 17-minute film features verses from the Koran with images of terrorist attacks in New York, London and Madrid, and calls on Muslims to remove "hatepreaching" verses from the text. Mr Wilders had been invited by the UKIP peer Lord Pearson of Rannoch.
A Home Office spokesman said today that the Government was "disappointed" by the tribunal's decision and was deliberating whether to appeal.