Pro-democracy campaigner Jimmy Lai has been sentenced to 20 years in prison after being convicted of national security offences in Hong Kong.
The media tycoon and British citizen was found guilty of two counts of conspiracy to collude with foreign forces and one count of publishing seditious materials in December last year.
The 78-year-old had denied all the charges against him, saying in court he was a “political prisoner” facing persecution from Beijing.
His lawyer gave no comment when asked if he would appeal his sentence.
Lai, who founded the now-defunct pro-democracy newspaper Apple Daily, was arrested in August 2020 after China imposed a national security law following massive anti-government protests in Hong Kong.
The longstanding critic of the Chinese Communist Party had previously been sentenced for several lesser offences during his five years in prison.
Lai’s plight has been criticised by world leaders including US President Donald Trump and UK Prime Minister Sir Keir
Starmer.
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Briton Jimmy Lai found guilty of national security offences in Hong Kong
Sir Keir discussed the case with Chinese leader Xi Jinping last month in Beijing’s Great Hall of the People, according to people briefed on the talks.
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Britain’s national security adviser, Jonathan Powell, and China’s foreign minister, Wang Yi, were also present.
“I raised the case of Jimmy Lai and called for his release,” Sir Keir told MPs in parliament after his trip. “Those discussions will continue, and the foreign secretary is in touch with Mr Lai’s family.”
Several Western diplomats told Reuters news agency that negotiations to free Lai would likely start in earnest after his sentencing and depending on whether he will appeal.
Lai was born in mainland China but fled to Hong Kong at the age of 12, after stowing away on a fishing boat. Here, he began working as a child labourer in a garment factory.
He went on to build a fortune with the fashion empire Giordano and, after the 1989 Tiananmen Square massacre, when thousands of people protested for political reforms in Beijing, he became a democracy advocate and turned his hand to newspapers.
Ahead of the 1997 handover of Hong Kong from the UK to China, he started the Chinese-language newspaper Apple Daily in an attempt to maintain freedom of speech.
The paper was staunchly pro-democratic and did not shy away from criticising authorities in Beijing.
Around the same time, in 1994, he became a full British citizen. He has never held a Chinese or Hong Kong passport, but is seen as a Chinese citizen by Hong Kong authorities.
It was his pro-democratic beliefs that led to Lai becoming a key figure in the 2019 protests in Hong Kong, spurred by Beijing’s tightening squeeze on wide-ranging freedoms. Lai’s Apple Daily newspaper backed the protesters, criticising the government reforms.
Lai and his sons were arrested in August 2020 after police raided the offices of the Apple Daily publisher, Next Digital. He was granted bail, but this was overturned in December of the same year, when Lai was charged with fraud.
He was charged under the very national security laws, put in place in 2020, that he had protested.
On 15 December, he was found guilty of collusion with foreign forces, as well as conspiracy to print and distribute seditious publications.
Read more about Jimmy Lai here
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