Bangkok Post

Hong Kong media mogul Jimmy Lai to go on trial

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>> HONG KONG: Jailed pro-democracy media tycoon Jimmy Lai will go on trial in Hong Kong tomorrow for national security crimes, facing life in prison in a case that has sparked internatio­nal condemnati­on.

Mr Lai, who is 76, is charged with several counts of “colluding with foreign forces” — a crime under a national security law imposed on Hong Kong by Beijing in 2020 following massive pro-democracy protests.

The case against Mr Lai, which will see him tried without a jury, is being closely watched as a test of how many of the civil liberties the city once boasted remain.

More than 30 people have been convicted under Hong Kong’s security law, but Mr Lai was one of the most recognisab­le figures in the pro-democracy movement.

Mr Lai is the first to contest the charge of “foreign collusion” — punishable with life behind bars.

Hong Kong’s crackdown has also seen police offer huge bounties for activists who fled the city, in a move that has been strongly condemned by the United States and Britain.

The most serious charges against Mr Lai revolve around Apple Daily, which he founded in 1995 and was once Hong Kong’s most popular

Chinese-language tabloid.

The paper was staunchly critical of Beijing and supported Hong Kong’s huge and sometimes violent pro-democracy protests in 2019.

It later called for internatio­nal sanctions against Chinese and local officials.

The outlet was forced to shutter in June 2021 after authoritie­s used the security law to raid it twice and freeze assets worth HK$18 million (80 million baht).

Authoritie­s charged Mr Lai and six former Apple Daily executives with “conspiracy to collude with foreign forces”.

Mr Lai was singled out for an additional collusion charge.

All defendants except Mr Lai have pleaded guilty and some have agreed to testify for the prosecutio­n.

The court tomorrow will also hear a raft of other charges against Mr Lai — which include “seditious publicatio­n”.

The United States, Britain, the European Union and the United Nations have all expressed concerns about Mr Lai’s case — which Beijing has dismissed as smearing and interferen­ce.

Mr Lai’s son Sebastien last month told AFP the case was “an opportunit­y for Hong Kong to show whether they are actually rule-of-law compliant”.

The world “should be paying attention to my father’s case, to the case of Hong Kong”, he said.

The Apple Daily owner’s arrest came during the rapid erosion of press freedom and political dissent in Hong Kong, with analysts saying the trial will show whether the city’s courts can rule independen­tly of Beijing.

How judges draw the line between the concepts of advocacy and collusion will be a key issue to watch, according to Georgetown University legal scholar Eric Lai.

“It is important to observe how the court would define ordinary overseas advocacy activities as a crime,” Mr Lai told AFP. The case was “also worth concern in terms of fair trial and due process,” he added.

Senior Beijing officials have issued statements condemning Mr Lai since 2019.

 ?? ?? PRO-DEMOCRACY FIGHTER: Jimmy Lai is escorted into a Hong Kong Correction­al Services van outside the Court of Final Appeal after being ordered to remain in jail while judges consider his fresh bail applicatio­n, in this Feb 1, 2021 file photo.
PRO-DEMOCRACY FIGHTER: Jimmy Lai is escorted into a Hong Kong Correction­al Services van outside the Court of Final Appeal after being ordered to remain in jail while judges consider his fresh bail applicatio­n, in this Feb 1, 2021 file photo.

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