As you said, look at the license:)

You may git clone qt, read the LGPL license, accept it, and deploy your Android 
app.
Just as you do with other LGPL code.

What else official do you need?

Yesterday i found worth reading:
https://wiki.qt.io/Licensing-talk-about-mobile-platforms

Am February 21, 2019 1:49:21 PM UTC schrieb Sylvain Pointeau 
<sylvain.point...@gmail.com>:
>On Tue, Feb 19, 2019 at 8:30 PM Sylvain Pointeau
><sylvain.point...@gmail.com>
>wrote:
>
>> Qt is free on desktop, but it is not free on mobile, which is a real
>> showstopper for me and many others.
>>
>> Le mar. 19 févr. 2019 à 20:12, ich <a...@golks.de> a écrit :
>>
>>> Qt is free, too.
>>>
>>
>I received few personal emails to ask me why am I writing that Qt is
>not
>free on mobile.
>
>I am sorry but this is the message from the Qt company, please show me
>one
>official statement that Qt is free to use on mobile.
>I would be really glad and finally use Qt instead of looking for
>alternatives.
>
>Best regards,
>Sylvain

-- 
Diese Nachricht wurde von meinem Android-Gerät mit K-9 Mail gesendet.
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