Britain has banned a prominent American Holocaust denier from entering the United Kingdom, the Home Office confirmed Wednesday.
Mark Weber, director of the California-based Institute for Historical Review, has questioned the scale of the Holocaust, in which 6 million Jews were killed.
"You are the subject of an exclusion decision taken personally by the Home Secretary on April 28, 2015 on Unacceptable Behavior ground," the letter to Weber dated Dec. 22 from Britain's Home Office said.
Prime Minister Theresa May, who became premier in 2016 amid political turmoil prompted by a shock referendum vote to leave the European Union, was Home Secretary at the time of the decision.
May "personally directed that you should be excluded from the United Kingdom on the grounds that your presence here is not conducive to the public good," the decision states.
The Home Office said it had no address for him when the decision was first made.
Weber said he learned he was banned from entering Britain while waiting at Madrid's airport to board a flight to London, where he intended to change planes for a flight to Los Angeles.
In a letter emailed to the Home Office, Weber said that the quotes attributed to him by the ministry were "secondhand information that is, at least in part, inaccurate, untrue or distorted."
In a 2009 article titled "How relevant is Holocaust revisionism?" Weber said he had devoted much time to critically reviewing the what he termed the Holocaust narrative.
But he said Holocaust revisionism had proved to be a hindrance to the real struggle against what he called "Jewish-Zionist" power.