Jimmy Lai Is a Martyr for Freedom

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Summary

There are many interesting tidbits about the life of the political prisoner Jimmy Lai. He hid in the bottom of a fishing boat to escape mainland Communist China for Hong Kong at the ripe age of 12. He built a garment empire after spending his adolescence working, and sleeping, in garment factories. Without media experience, he started several successful news ventures鈥攎ost notably the plucky and irreverent Apple Daily鈥攚hich forcefully advocated for democracy and free speech. And he may be sentenced to die in prison in connection with his efforts promoting liberty in China. But the most interesting fact, by far, is that Lai is a citizen of the United Kingdom (U.K.). The dissident was convicted in Hong Kong earlier this week of two counts of conspiring to collude with foreign forces and one count of publishing seditious material鈥攃harges stemming from his crusade against illiberalism, a fight he has been waging for decades. Lai finding himself in trouble was not a surprise. That's especially true amid the backdrop of Hong Kong's "national security" law, which sought to cripple dissent, that took effect in 2020. He was arrested in August of that year and released on bail; authorities revoked it four months later. Lai has been in custody since. That he would probably end up in prison, however, was never really in doubt. Which brings me back to his U.K. citizenship. Lai did not have to stay in Hong Kong as the walls closed in on him. The self-made business tycoon鈥攐nce a billionaire before the government froze his assets鈥攃ould have fled to a residence abroad. His friend Mark Clifford, formerly the editor in chief of the South China Morning Post, told me in an interview earlier this year that many people in Lai's circle urged him to do just that. He declined. "Everything I have was given to me by Hong Kong. I won't be leaving," Lai told Radio Free Asia in June 2020. "I'm going to stay here and fight to the bitter end." Lawmakers would go on to formally approve the national s...

First seen: 2025-12-22 17:35

Last seen: 2025-12-23 02:36