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Home » Hong Kong court finds democracy activist Jimmy Lai guilty of sedition
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Hong Kong court finds democracy activist Jimmy Lai guilty of sedition

Editor-In-ChiefBy Editor-In-ChiefDecember 14, 2025No Comments3 Mins Read
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Next Digital founder Jimmy Lai steps out of a Department of Corrections vehicle as he arrives at the Court of Final Appeal for the verdict in a bail hearing in Hong Kong, China, Tuesday, February 9, 2021. Hong Kong prosecutors last year charged Lai, a prominent critic of the Chinese government and local authorities, under national security laws with colluding with foreigners to seek sanctions against China. Photographer: Chan Long Hei/Bloomberg via Getty Images

Bloomberg | Bloomberg | Getty Images

Hong Kong democracy activist and media mogul Jimmy Lai was found guilty of sedition and foreign collusion by a Hong Kong court on Monday.

The 78-year-old was charged under Hong Kong’s controversial national security law enacted by the Chinese government in 2020 after pro-democracy protests swept the region in 2019.

The court said Lai was guilty of “conspiracy to conspire with a foreign country or external forces to endanger national security.”

It also said that Mr. Li and the tabloid Apple Daily called on countries and entities outside China to “improve sanctions, blockades, or other hostile activities” against Hong Kong and China.

The court said in its 850-page judgment that the businessman “has harbored resentment and hatred for the People’s Republic of China for a long time in his adult life.”

Lai, one of the Chinese Communist Party’s most vocal critics, had pleaded not guilty to two charges under the National Security Law: collusion with foreign forces and conspiracy to publish inflammatory material.

He has been arrested since 2020 and his trial will begin in December 2023.

The businessman, who founded Asian clothing brand Giordano, newspaper company Apple Daily, and digital media company Next Digital, was mentioned by US President Donald Trump during his meeting with Chinese President Xi Jinping in South Korea in October.

According to Reuters, Trump pressed Xi to release Lai during the meeting.

The court said Lai’s “sole intention” was to seek the overthrow of the Chinese Communist Party, adding: “Even if the ultimate price was sacrificing the interests of the people of the People’s Republic of China and the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region (Hong Kong is a special administrative region of China). This was the ultimate purpose of the conspiracy and separatist publications.”

The court ruling is the latest development in Hong Kong’s political landscape, which has seen the decline of democratic opposition in one of Asia’s financial hubs since the enactment of the national security law.

Hong Kong’s electoral system changes in 2021 have drastically reduced the number of directly elected members of the city council, and only “patriots” who have been vetted by the election commission can run for election.

The ruling comes on the heels of Sunday’s dissolution of Hong Kong’s last pro-democracy political party after 31 years and a “patriots-only” legislative election that had the second-lowest turnout in the region’s history.

“If I were running Hong Kong, I would know that I would have to convict this man, and then I would repatriate him… That would help give the most important impression and confidence to people in the financial industry that Hong Kong is back to its normal, business-driven, dynamic self,” veteran investor David Roche told CNBC before the verdict.

Mr Lai acquired British nationality before Hong Kong was handed back to China in 1997.



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