Daily Mail

Seized by hordes of Hong Kong police, the millionair­e who backed democracy

- Mail Foreign Service

Scores of police descended on the Apple Daily newspaper and marched owner Jimmy Lai through the office in handcuffs as part of a crackdown on dissent.

Mr Lai has been predicting his arrest since a draconian national security law came into force in June. He was among nine men and one woman detained on charges that include colluding with foreign forces. This offence under the security law comes with the threat of life in prison.

Two of Mr Lai’s sons were among those arrested along with Wilson Li, a freelance video journalist.

Mr Lai, 71, has been one of the most prominent supporters of democracy in the city and an ardent critic of Beijing.

In London, Foreign Office minister Nigel Adams said the arrests were ‘deeply concerning’, adding: ‘[This is] more evidence the national security law being used as pretext to silence opposition.’ Activist Nathan

Silenced: Hong Kong police officers take away Jimmy Lai Law, who fled Hong Kong to added: ‘This is unpreceden­ted, London, said on social media: and would be unimaginab­le only ‘The end of freedom of Press in one or two months ago.’ Hong Kong. The national security Chris Patten, the last British law is quashing the freedom governor of the financial hub, of our society, spreading politics accused authoritie­s of carrying of fear.’ out ‘ the most outrageous

Journalist­s at the Apple Daily assault yet on what is left of broadcaste­d dramatic footage Hong Kong’s free press’. on Facebook of some 200 uniformed The security law was imposed police conducting the by Beijing as it tried to quell the raid, and the newspaper’s editor huge pro- democracy protests Law Wai-kwong demanding a that began last year and curtail warrant from officers. Staff were freedoms enjoyed by the Hong ordered to line up so officers Kong Chinese that are not could check their identities and shared by those living in the rest search the newsroom. of the authoritar­ian country.

Chris Yeung of the Hong Kong It gives China the power to put Journalist­s Associatio­n, its notorious secret police on to described the police action as the streets and to transfer activists ‘shocking and terrifying’. He to the mainland. Mr Lai’s

Apple Daily and Next Magazine are unapologet­ically pro-democracy. They are enormously popular but funded largely by their owner because few companies dare advertise with them.

China routinely calls him the ‘black hand’ behind last year’s protests. In mid- June, two weeks before the new security law was introduced, Mr Lai said: ‘I’m prepared for prison.’

Many Western nations believe the security law has ended the autonomy that Beijing promised Hong Kong could keep after its 1997 handover by Britain.

There have been previous waves of arrests since it was passed on June 30 but Mr Lai’s is the highest profile. He is thought to be worth more than $1billion (£766million). He made his fortune in the clothing industry.

Senior British officers in the Hong Kong police could face a private prosecutio­n in a UK court for torturing pro-democracy demonstrat­ors.

The case against the expatriate officers is being brought by activists and lawyers, who are using a JustGiving page to fund a full-time legal team.

Luke de Pulford, of human rights group Hong Kong Watch, said many officers behind the ‘sustained brutality’ used on protesters were British and ‘as such, are subject to British law.’

 ??  ?? Mob handed: Some 200 police officers marched into the offices of Hong Kong pro-democracy newspaper Apple Daily
Mob handed: Some 200 police officers marched into the offices of Hong Kong pro-democracy newspaper Apple Daily
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