Jimmy Lai’s Apple Daily newspaper supported democracy and criticized China’s Communist Party. (Associated Press)
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NOTE: In June 2020, the Communist Party of China passed a wide-ranging new “security” law for Hong Kong which makes it easier for the communists to punish protesters and reduces the city’s autonomy. Those who support democracy called it “the end of Hong Kong.”
The Chinese Communist Party (CCP) exerts significant, increasing control over Hong Kong’s courts, especially since the 2020 National Security Law, effectively undermining judicial independence and transforming the courts into tools for political suppression, though Hong Kong maintains its separate common law system in principle.
Lai, 78, was convicted on one count of conspiracy to print, publish, sell or produce seditious material and one count of conspiracy to collude with a foreign country or external elements to endanger national security.
Several companies linked to Apple Daily, including Apple Daily Limited, Apple Daily Printing Limited and AD Internet Limited, were also convicted.
Collusion with foreign forces is an offense punishable by up to life imprisonment under Hong Kong’s draconian national security law.
“Having carefully assessed all the evidence with the law in mind, the Court was satisfied that the prosecution had proved the charges against the defendants beyond any reasonable doubt,” the court said in a statement.
The court ruled that articles [published] by Apple Daily were “objectively seditious” and were written with the intent to drag “the HKSAR Government into hatred and contempt and to exciting disaffection against it.”
The ruling also said Lai used Apple Daily and his personal influence “to carry out a consistent campaign with a view to undermine the legitimacy or authority” of China’s communist central government, the Hong Kong government and their institutions while “harming the relation between the CPG and the HKSAR Government with the people of Hong Kong.”
The conviction is drawing widespread condemnation from human rights, pro-democracy, pro-free speech and civil rights activists and organizations who say the charges were trumped up and the court stacked with pro-China judges.
“Bogus convictions based on bogus charges on a bogus law,” Yaqiu Wang, a Chinese human rights and democracy advocate and a fellow at the University of Chicago’s Forum for Free Inquiry and Expression, said in a statement on X.
“The Hong Kong and Beijing authorities will face accountability for their cruelty towards Jimmy Lai — one of the bravest human beings of our time. I hope that day will come soon, and we together will bring it about.”
The case stems from mass protests that erupted in the city starting in 2019 against a new extradition law that would have allowed fugitives from mainland justice to be returned to China to face judges under China’s communist government.
The rule was seen in the once semi-autonomous Hong Kong as an effort to silence dissent by permitting Chinese dissidents and opponents to be sent to the mainland.
The mass protests [which were peaceful] were met with violence [by the government against the protesters] and mass arrests, and the demonstrations persisted even after the Hong Kong government revoked the law.
In response, China imposed a new, draconian national security law on Hong Kong that went into effect June 30, 2020, which attracted widespread international condemnation for undermining the city’s mini constitution, Basic Law, and agreements Beijing made to Britain when the city was returned to Chinese sovereignty in 1997.
Under the new law, people could be charged with widely defined crimes of sedition, subversion, terrorism and working with foreign agencies to undermine China’s national security.
Lai was arrested under the national security law and his Apple Daily offices were raided in August 2020, and let out on bail. He was then re-arrested shortly before being formally charged in December of that year. He has been in jail since.
Lai pleaded not guilty to two counts of “conspiracy to collude with foreign forces” and a separate count of conspiracy to publish seditious material in Apple Daily.
[Lai’s sentence will be announced later. The 78-year-old potentially faces life in prison. His next court date is Jan. 12, and his defense has not yet announced whether they intend to appeal].“The conviction of Jimmy Lai on bogus charges after five years of solitary confinement is both cruel and a travesty of justice,” Human Rights Watch said in a statement in response to the verdict.
“The Chinese and Hong Kong governments should pay a cost for their unrelenting efforts to muzzle Hong Kong’s press.”
Questions
NOTE TO STUDENTS: Before answering the questions, read the “Background” below and check out the links and watch the videos under “Resources.”
1. Who is Jimmy Lai?
2. Define the following as used in the article:
- conspiracy
- seditious
- collude
3. a) What was Mr. Lai convicted of doing?
b) What did he actually do?
4. What did the court say? How did the judges rule?
5. Consider the importance of the integrity of the court and impartiality of judges.
a) Do you think Jimmy Lai got a fair trial?
b) Do you think Hong Kongers can expect judicial integrity and impartiality in their court system, which is now controlled by the Chinese Communist Party (CCP)? Explain your answer.
6. What groups/people have condemned the court’s conviction of Jimmy Lai? What did they say?
7. When asked by reporters about Jimmy’s Lai’s conviction, President Trump said, “I feel so badly. I spoke to President Xi about it and I asked to consider his release. He’s an older man, and he’s not well. So I did put that request out. We’ll see what happens, okay?”
Do you think UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer should take an active role in engaging with Xi JinPing on Jimmy Lai’s behalf as he is a British citizen?
Background
Jimmy Lai became a billionaire through a classic rags-to-riches story.
- After fleeing Communist China as a child, Lai worked in garment factories in Hong Kong, quickly rising to manage a factory and eventually owning his own.
- He founded the popular Giordano fast-fashion retail chain in 1981, which expanded rapidly across Asia, becoming a massive commercial success.
- After selling his stake in Giordano in the mid-1990s, Lai channeled his fortune into media, launching Next Magazine (1990) and the influential Apple Daily (1995), [which he founded ahead of the 1997 handover of Hong Kong from the UK to China in an attempt to maintain freedom of speech].
- Lai used his media platforms and personal wealth to support Hong Kong’s pro-democracy movement, fearlessly criticizing the Chinese Communist Party.
- Apple Daily became a major voice for civil liberties, mobilizing massive protests, making Lai a symbol of resistance against Beijing’s increasing control.
- His activism led to his arrest under the (Chinese Communist government’s) National Security Law in 2020, resulting in imprisonment, even as his business empire was dismantled. (from Google AI, Dec. 17)
- Lai has been a British citizen since 1994. His sole passport is British.
What is the Sino-British Joint Declaration? It is an agreement signed by Britain and China in 1984 to settle the future of Hong Kong. The two governments agreed China would reassume control of Hong Kong, which was occupied by Britain after the Opium War in 1840, from July 1, 1997 and Hong Kong would have autonomy* for 50 years. [*autonomy is the quality or state of being self-governing, especially: the right of self-government]
- In accordance with the “one country, two systems” principle agreed between the UK and the China, the communist system of China would not be practiced in the Hong Kong, and Hong Kong’s previous capitalist system and its way of life would remain unchanged for a period of 50 years until 2047.
- During Hong Kong’s Umbrella Revolution in 2014, a campaign against the infringements on freedom in Hong Kong by mainland China, Chinese officials said for the first time, that China considered the Joint Declaration “void,” a position dismissed as “clearly wrong” by a senior Hong Kong legal scholar and rejected by the British foreign secretary, who noted that the document was a legally binding agreement that must be honored. (wikipedia, adapted)
Resources
Wall Street Journal, December 15, 2025:
Sky News, December 15, 2025:
Jimmy Lai’s son, December 15, 2025:
See previous articles on Jimmy Lai and the free-speech / pro-democracy supporters:
- Thousands march in Hong Kong against extradition law (April 30, 2019)
- Hong Kong Protesters appeal to Trump for help (Sept. 10, 2019)
- In October 2019, the NBA’s Houston Rockets GM tweeted an image that said “Fight for Freedom. Stand for Hong Kong.” After that, “China bans Houston Rockets following GM tweet”
- CARTOON “LeBron” (Oct. 18, 2019)
- EDITORIAL: “How the NBA censored me on American soil” (Oct. 17, 2019)
- Hong Kong: China suspends U.S. military port calls over pro-Hong Kong (Dec. 3, 2019)
- China arrests Hong Kong pro-democracy activists (April 20, 2020)
- Hong Kong’s new hotline: inform on your neighbors (Nov. 10, 2020)
- Jailed pro-democracy advocate Joshua Wong, 24, arrested again in Hong Kong (Jan. 12, 2021)
Visit #Free Jimmy Lai
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