Monday, May 19, 2025
Asia Democracy Chronicles
Follow Us
No Result
View All Result
  • Features & Analysis
    • All
    • Analysis
    • Articles

    Creeping militarization under a Prabowo-led Indonesia

    Private: Economic fragility hobbles press freedom in Asia

    Economic fragility hobbles press freedom in Asia

    Scam hubs linked to Naypyidaw

    Scam hubs linked to Naypyidaw

    Fifty years since the war, Vietnam still seeks reconciliation

    Post-disaster conundrum

    Post-disaster conundrum

    From domestic crackdown to global manhunt

    From domestic crackdown to global manhunt

    Disputed lands, contested rights

    Disputed lands, contested rights

    Pressed for funds

    Pressed for funds

    Defunded dreams

    Defunded dreams

  • Countries
    • NORTHEAST ASIA
      • China
        • Hong Kong
        • Macau
        • Tibet
      • Japan
      • Mongolia
      • North Korea
      • South Korea
      • Taiwan
    • SOUTH ASIA
      • Afghanistan
      • Bangladesh
      • India
      • Nepal
      • Pakistan
      • Sri Lanka
    • SOUTHEAST ASIA
      • Brunei
      • Cambodia
      • Indonesia
      • Laos
      • Malaysia
      • Myanmar
      • Philippines
      • Singapore
      • Thailand
      • Timor-Leste
      • Vietnam
    • GLOBAL / REGIONAL
  • Issues
    • Elections
    • Access to Education
    • Access to Health
    • Authoritarianism and Abuse of Power
    • Civil Liberties
    • Discrimination Against Covid-19 Patients and Specific Sectors
    • Gender-based Violence and Child Abuse
    • Governance
    • Labor and Migrant Workers’ Rights
    • Media Freedom – Issues
    • Movement and Migration
    • Privacy and Surveillance
    • Social Protection and Inclusion
      • Peace and Diplomacy
  • Democracy Digest
    • Democracy Digest Archive
  • Asia Through The Lens
    • Northeast Asia
    • South Asia
    • Southeast Asia
    • Regional / Global
  • Democracy Watch
  • Statements
    • Civil Society Statements
  • About
    • Pitch Us
    • Back to ADN
  • Features & Analysis
    • All
    • Analysis
    • Articles

    Creeping militarization under a Prabowo-led Indonesia

    Private: Economic fragility hobbles press freedom in Asia

    Economic fragility hobbles press freedom in Asia

    Scam hubs linked to Naypyidaw

    Scam hubs linked to Naypyidaw

    Fifty years since the war, Vietnam still seeks reconciliation

    Post-disaster conundrum

    Post-disaster conundrum

    From domestic crackdown to global manhunt

    From domestic crackdown to global manhunt

    Disputed lands, contested rights

    Disputed lands, contested rights

    Pressed for funds

    Pressed for funds

    Defunded dreams

    Defunded dreams

  • Countries
    • NORTHEAST ASIA
      • China
        • Hong Kong
        • Macau
        • Tibet
      • Japan
      • Mongolia
      • North Korea
      • South Korea
      • Taiwan
    • SOUTH ASIA
      • Afghanistan
      • Bangladesh
      • India
      • Nepal
      • Pakistan
      • Sri Lanka
    • SOUTHEAST ASIA
      • Brunei
      • Cambodia
      • Indonesia
      • Laos
      • Malaysia
      • Myanmar
      • Philippines
      • Singapore
      • Thailand
      • Timor-Leste
      • Vietnam
    • GLOBAL / REGIONAL
  • Issues
    • Elections
    • Access to Education
    • Access to Health
    • Authoritarianism and Abuse of Power
    • Civil Liberties
    • Discrimination Against Covid-19 Patients and Specific Sectors
    • Gender-based Violence and Child Abuse
    • Governance
    • Labor and Migrant Workers’ Rights
    • Media Freedom – Issues
    • Movement and Migration
    • Privacy and Surveillance
    • Social Protection and Inclusion
      • Peace and Diplomacy
  • Democracy Digest
    • Democracy Digest Archive
  • Asia Through The Lens
    • Northeast Asia
    • South Asia
    • Southeast Asia
    • Regional / Global
  • Democracy Watch
  • Statements
    • Civil Society Statements
  • About
    • Pitch Us
    • Back to ADN
No Result
View All Result
Asia Democracy Chronicles
No Result
View All Result
Home Communications Statements

Hong Kong: No More Sham Trials – Publisher Jimmy Lai Must Be Freed

Asia Democracy ChroniclesbyAsia Democracy Chronicles
December 3, 2022
in Statements
Reading Time: 4 mins read
A A
0
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter
Getting your Trinity Audio player ready...

2 December 2022

ARTICLE 19 reiterates its call for the immediate and unconditional release of Jimmy Lai, pro-democracy activist and publisher of Apple Daily, and urges the Hong Kong government to end its campaign of judicial harassment against him, and others, under the National Security Law. 

Detained since December 2020, Lai was set to begin trial today, 1 December, for ‘collusion with foreign forces’ under Hong Kong’s draconian National Security Law (NSL), imposed by China in 2020, which carries the maximum punishment of a life sentence. The trial has now been postponed until 13 December as Hong Kong awaits Beijing’s decision whether foreign lawyers can serve in national security cases. A breach of judicial independence, this follows a request for Beijing’s intervention earlier in the week from Hong Kong’s Chief Executive John Lee.

On Thursday, 1 December, in a further blow to judicial independence, Hong Kong’s immigration department also refused a working visa for Timothy Owens, the British human rights lawyer who the Hong Kong High Court had previously approved to represent Jimmy Lai.

Lai, 74, is a founder of the now defunct Apple Daily, one of Hong Kong’s most popular independent newspapers, which was forced to shut in June 2021. For decades, Lai has been a prominent supporter of Hong Kong’s pro-democracy movement and a vocal critic of the Chinese government. He has been a British citizen since 1996.

Lai has been frequently targeted by the authorities for his activism. He has already been sentenced to 20 months in prison for his participation in pro-democracy protests between 2019 and 2020.

Michael Caster, Asia Digital Programme Manager at ARTICLE 19, said: 

‘For years, Jimmy Lai has courageously spoken truth to power. An advocate for media freedom, democracy and the right to protest, his words and actions have made him a target of those in Hong Kong and Beijing whose cowardice leads them to believe that crushing dissent is a show of strength. In reality, it is the desperate tactic of the weak.

Jimmy Lai is a British citizen who faces spending the rest of his life behind bars for exercising and defending his human rights and those of all Hong Kongers. The UK government should be prepared to act decisively, in light of this appalling attack on the freedom of one of its citizens and indeed the entire population of Hong Kong. This includes openness to Magnitsky-style targeted sanctions on Hong Kong officials who continue to violate human rights, especially under the repressive National Security Law.

‘Jimmy Lai is also a businessman. For British and international companies and financial institutions, there can be no more business as usual. Last month, Hong Kong hosted the Global Financial Leaders’ Investment Summit, where Chief Executive John Lee absurdly claimed that ‘the worst is behind us’, but as long as the National Security Law remains in place and entrepreneurs and journalists are terrorised into silence, the worst is far from over; it is the new normal. The private sector must reconcile its responsibility to respect human rights with its ongoing business interests in Hong Kong.’

Hong Kong, once lauded for its freedoms contrasting mainland China, has experienced the single biggest 10-year decline in ARTICLE 19’s Global Expression Report: since 2011, its score has dropped by 58 points. In 2022, Hong Kong ranked 127 out of 161 countries in the ‘in crisis’ category.

chart showing Hong Kong's steep decline in freedoms

This decline has, in a large part, been driven by the enactment of the NSL. As of March 2022, 196 people have been arrested under the NSL. More than 120 of them have been prosecuted, with a 100 percent conviction rate.

Over the past two years, the Hong Kong government has dramatically curtailed press freedom in Hong Kong. Since the imposition of the NSL, nearly all independent media outlets have been forced to close. The closure of Apple Daily was swiftly followed by the closure of Stand News, another pro-democracy outlet. Two former Stand News editors have been charged with ‘sedition’ and their trial began last month. They face up to two years in jail if convicted.

ARTICLE 19 and Hong Kong Watch noted in their joint submission to the UN Human Rights Committee that numerous rights have been restricted under the NSL, from increasing threats to the freedom of religion or belief, restrictions of internet freedoms, severe curtailment of freedom of expression, and an outright assault on the independent press and academic freedom – all in the name of national security. For these reasons, in its July concluding observations, the Committee enjoined Hong Kong to ‘take concrete steps to repeal the current National Security Law and, in the meantime, refrain from applying the Law’.

‘Hong Kong must put an emergency halt to this severe backtracking in rights, immediately and unconditionally release Jimmy Lai, and others who have been arbitrarily arrested and imprisoned,’ said Caster.

‘If Hong Kong refuses to repeal the National Security Law and continues with these sham trials, it should expect increasing political and economic consequences.’ #

Source: https://www.article19.org/resources/hong-kong-no-more-sham-trials-publisher-jimmy-lai-must-be-freed/

Tags: hong kongNortheast AsiaStatement
Asia Democracy Chronicles

Asia Democracy Chronicles

Next Post
Civil society activists share demands with government, world

Civil society activists share demands with government, world

Lack of full implementation of Chittagong Hill Tracts accord is impacting indigenous women and girls gravely

Lack of full implementation of Chittagong Hill Tracts accord is impacting indigenous women and girls gravely

Lack of coordination impedes implementation of National Policy for Persons with Disabilities

Lack of coordination impedes implementation of National Policy for Persons with Disabilities

Features and Analysis

  • All
  • Special Feature
Special Feature

Creeping militarization under a Prabowo-led Indonesia

byCristina Chi
May 17, 2025
0

Six months into his presidency, Indonesian President Prabowo Subianto has expanded military influence across the government, raising deep concerns among...

Read more
Private: Economic fragility hobbles press freedom in Asia
Special Feature

Economic fragility hobbles press freedom in Asia

byCristina Chi
May 17, 2025
0

The 2025 World Press Freedom Index paints a bleak picture of press freedom in the region, with declines in economic...

Read more
Scam hubs linked to Naypyidaw
Special Feature

Scam hubs linked to Naypyidaw

byRejimon Kuttappan
May 16, 2025
0

Myanmar’s junta and its armed local affiliates are keeping the country’s scam centers in business in the midst of a...

Read more
Analysis

Fifty years since the war, Vietnam still seeks reconciliation

byJacopo Romanelliand1 others
May 10, 2025
0

Saigon falls, the United States withdraws, and the country reunifies. But divisions remain and a peace beyond the end of...

Read more

Pitch Us A Story

Have a story to tell, nuanced insights, or expert analysis to share with a regional (i.e. Asia), even global, audience? Want to weigh in on specific issues, including those disproportionately affecting specific segments of society, which run the gamut from poverty and inequality to human rights violations? We’d love to hear from you.

We run features, op-eds, analyses, among others, that probe issues around fundamental rights and civil liberties, and illuminate the challenges of governance in Asia.

Yes, I’m Interested

Follow Us

Facebook
Twitter
RSS

©  Asia Democracy Chronicles.

Web Design and Development by Neitiviti Studios.

  • Features & Analysis
  • Countries
  • Issues
  • Democracy Digest
  • Asia Through The Lens
  • Democracy Watch
  • Statements
  • About
No Result
View All Result
  • Features & Analysis
  • Countries
    • NORTHEAST ASIA
      • China
      • Japan
      • Mongolia
      • North Korea
      • South Korea
      • Taiwan
    • SOUTH ASIA
      • Afghanistan
      • Bangladesh
      • India
      • Nepal
      • Pakistan
      • Sri Lanka
    • SOUTHEAST ASIA
      • Brunei
      • Cambodia
      • Indonesia
      • Laos
      • Malaysia
      • Myanmar
      • Philippines
      • Singapore
      • Thailand
      • Timor-Leste
      • Vietnam
    • GLOBAL / REGIONAL
  • Issues
    • Elections
    • Access to Education
    • Access to Health
    • Authoritarianism and Abuse of Power
    • Civil Liberties
    • Discrimination Against Covid-19 Patients and Specific Sectors
    • Gender-based Violence and Child Abuse
    • Governance
    • Labor and Migrant Workers’ Rights
    • Media Freedom – Issues
    • Movement and Migration
    • Privacy and Surveillance
    • Social Protection and Inclusion
      • Peace and Diplomacy
  • Democracy Digest
    • Democracy Digest Archive
  • Asia Through The Lens
    • Northeast Asia
    • South Asia
    • Southeast Asia
    • Regional / Global
  • Democracy Watch
  • Statements
    • Civil Society Statements
  • About
    • Pitch Us
    • Back to ADN

© 2022 Asia Democracy Chronicles - Designed and Developed by Neitiviti Studios.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In