Hong Kong’s Jimmy Lai sentenced to 20 years in prison after landmark national security trial
By Chris Lau, CNN
Hong Kong (CNN) — Former Hong Kong media tycoon Jimmy Lai has been sentenced to 20 years in prison, ending a years-long legal battle that has come to define Beijing’s transformational crackdown on the once-freewheeling financial hub.
The 78-year-old self-made billionaire was among the highest-profile government critics charged since Beijing imposed a sweeping national security law on the semi-autonomous southern city in 2020.
The lengthy sentence – Lai will not be eligible for parole until he is in his late 90s – will likely galvanize international calls for the media mogul’s release in the landmark trial closely watched by Western world leaders, including US President Donald Trump, who previously vowed to “get him out.”
Trump is expected to travel to China in the coming months to meet his counterpart Xi Jinping and many of Lai’s supporters will be lobbying him to raise the jailed media mogul’s case.
Lai’s son, Sebastien, was quick to denounce the sentence, calling it draconian and “life-threatening” for his father. It is the longest delivered under the national security law.
“This is a heartbreakingly cruel sentence,” said Claire, Jimmy Lai’s daughter. “I have watched my father’s health deteriorate dramatically and the conditions he’s kept in go from bad to worse. If this sentence is carried out, he will die a martyr behind bars.”
Lai’s outspokenness over the Hong Kong’s shrinking freedoms – including to top US officials – and his role as the founder of now-defunct Apple Daily, a fiercely pro-democracy tabloid newspaper, had long made him a thorn in Beijing’s side.
Both Beijing and Hong Kong’s government have repeatedly rejected international criticism of Lai’s prosecution and dismissed accusations that his jailing was politically motivated or an assault on press freedom. Authorities have said Lai has received adequate medical attention in prison.
He was found guilty of two national security charges and a sedition charge in December following a years-long court battle.
Lai, looking visibly slim in a white jacket, smiled slightly upon hearing the sentence Monday. Before the court session began, he had put his hands together to greet those sitting in the court gallery and turned to see six former Apple Daily colleagues who were also awaiting sentencing.
Those colleagues were jailed too, receiving sentences ranging from 6 years, 9 months to 10 years behind bars. Apple Daily and its affiliated companies were fined 6 million Hong Kong Dollars ($767,000).
Beijing’s national security law has transformed Hong Kong, with authorities jailing dozens of dissidents; forcing civil society groups and outspoken media outlets to disband; and neutering the city’s once-raucous political scene.
City and national authorities say their restrictions have “restored stability” following mass anti-government protests in 2019 that turned violent at times.
Supporters had been lining up for days outside the West Kowloon court since last week hoping to catch a glimpse of Lai.
“He is the flag of Hong Kong,” Chan Chun-yee, 75, who arrived outside the court on Thursday, told CNN. “I don’t agree with everything he did but I aligned with his spirit and the things he pursued, such as freedom, democracy and justice.”
Another supporter, who asked to be identified only as Andy, said: “Lai and his colleagues deserve a Nobel Peace Prize.”
Police ramped up security outside the court complex, setting up cordon lines and searching those lining up. Judges also warned the public not to disturb the court proceeding or face expulsion.
What the judges said
When convicting Lai in December, the three judges hand-picked by the Hong Kong government to preside over national security cases said they found that there was “no doubt that (Lai) had harbored his resentment and hatred of the PRC (People’s Republic of China),” calling him a “mastermind of the conspiracies.”
They pointed to his lobbying of US politicians during Trump’s first term – much of it before the security law was enacted – as evidence of sedition and colluding with foreign forces, including his meetings with senior White House figures and attempts to meet Trump himself.
Lai also used Apple Daily to call for international sanctions against China and Hong Kong, the judges concluded. The US alone sanctioned more than a dozen Hong Kong and Chinese officials.
In a press summary of Monday’s sentence, the judges called his actions “conspiracies” that were “not only well planned but were premeditated” to reach both local and overseas audiences.
They also concluded that Lai committed the “most serious category” of sedition given the number of articles involved and the duration of the offence. Prosecutors previously said Apple Daily had published up to 161 seditious articles.
Lai can appeal the verdict and sentence. But the process often drags on for years, with a slim success rate. Only one in almost 100 people charged under the national security law has ever been fully acquitted.
International condemnation
The was swift and furious global reaction to Lai’s sentence.
Taiwan’s government said it “denied people the people’s basic right to hold those in power accountable.” China’s ruling Communist Party claims democratic and self-ruled Taiwan as its territory, despite having never controlled it, and has vowed to annex the island, by force if necessary.
Rights group Amnesty International condemned it as “a cold-blooded attack on freedom of expression.” While Lai’s son, Sebastien Lai, said it signified “the total destruction of the Hong Kong legal system and the end of justice.”
International relations experts said Lai’s battle for freedom could now spill over into the diplomatic sphere.
Lai, a British passport holder and a practicing Catholic, has powerful voices lobbying for his release in both Britain and the United States. In the latter, many on the Christian right have been vocal supporters.
Trump has vowed repeatedly to secure Lai’s release.
In August, Trump said he had put out a “request” to Chinese leader Xi Jinping, asking him to consider Lai’s release.
Lai’s treatment could turn into another sticking point for the world’s two biggest economies, which are already clashing over a range of issues from trade to Taiwan.
“Trump will likely raise it again in his bargaining with Xi,” said Hung Ho-fung, Professor of Political Economy at John Hopkins University’s School of Advanced International Studies.
“He (Lai) is British citizen and a pro-democracy icon in the greater China region. Just raising the issue to Beijing is good press.”
Meanwhile, Beijing may also find Lai a “useful bargaining chip,” given his ailing health.
“If Beijing could exact compromises from Washington over trade, tech, and even Taiwan by eventually granting Lai a compassionate release based on health grounds, it is a good bargain,” he said.
“Better than letting him die in jail and become another martyr,” Ho added.
His daughter Claire has been rallying support from political figures in the US, such as Democratic former House speaker Nancy Pelosi and Republican congressman Brian Mast, chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, while Lai’s son Sebastien is appealing to the British government for help.
Many Western governments and human rights groups have also condemned Lai’s prosecution and called for his release.
“We continue to express our concerns about deteriorating rights, freedoms and autonomy in Hong Kong,” read a joint statement by the High Representative of the European Union and foreign ministers of the Group of Seven countries, which includes Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, Britain, and the US, following Lai’s verdict last year.
A Hong Kong government spokesperson hit back, saying Western leaders “wantonly vilified” authorities in the city and “continued to unscrupulously distort the facts.”
“What these countries have done in this case is a true reflection of their bullying behaviour all along, which is extremely ugly and despicable,” they said.
Beijing’s foreign ministry’s office in Hong Kong expressed its “strong dissatisfaction and resolute opposition,” accusing the countries of meddling in Chinese internal politics.
Hong Kong, a city transformed
In many ways Lai’s life story tracks that of the city whose cause he came to embrace.
Born in mainland China, Lai arrived in British-ruled Hong Kong at 12 years old, just one of millions of mainlanders who fled communist China and moved to the free-wheeling business hub.
He worked his way up from factory laborer to wealthy clothing tycoon and then pivoted to media, founding Apple Daily in 1995, two years before Hong Kong was handed over to China.
The outspoken publisher and his newspaper were once at the forefront of the city’s pro-democracy movement, in a time of much greater press freedom.
The newspaper printed its last edition in June 2021 after police raided its office and froze its assets. Many ex-Apple Daily journalists have since left Hong Kong.
The city’s press freedom ranking plunged drastically from 80th out of 180 countries in 2021 to 140th last year, according to Reporters Without Borders. Hong Kong once ranked 18th, in 2002.
A Hong Kong government spokesperson has said Lai’s case has “nothing to do with freedom of the press at all.”
Eric Lai, a senior fellow at Georgetown University’s Center for Asian Law, and no relation to Jimmy Lai, said a credible financial hub requires the free flow of information to safeguard a transparent investment environment.
“With critical media outlets shut down and criminalized, as well as open exchange with foreign officials and policymakers on critical policy affairs being deemed criminal activities, the state of information access and free exchange of ideas and opinions are sharply jeopardized,” he said.
“It has nothing to do with press freedom because they prioritize the need for safeguarding regime security over freedom of expressing sharp critiques,” Eric Lai said.
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CNN’s Samra Zulfaqar contributed reporting