Jimmy Lai Got a 20-Year Sentence for Saying Things the Chinese Government Didn't Like
China's "national security law" was perfectly tailored to zero in on someone like Lai, who vigorously pushed for democracy, freedom of speech, and government reform in Hong Kong.
There's a reason Thanksgiving predictably gives way to yearly advice columns on how to placate the crazy uncle who somehow finds a way to make mashed potatoes political. In the U.S., criticizing the government is a national pastime—whether in polite conversation, on social media, or across the dinner table.
In China, meanwhile, it can amount to a life sentence.
Such is the case of Jimmy Lai, the 78-year-old Chinese political dissident who was sentenced on Monday to 20 years' imprisonment following his conviction last year on two counts of conspiring to collude with foreign forces and one count of publishing seditious material. That rap sheet sounds ominous. It is, but not in the way it reads. The portentous language of the charges masks that he was ultimately found guilty of exercising a basic right: railing against the state.
There is no shortage of material in China for government critics. That helps explain why, in 2020, the mainland imposed a "national security law" on Hong Kong, where Lai made his home. He was arrested that same year. The name of the legislation is again deceptive, as it used "national security" as a guise to paralyze dissent, especially as some in the city sought to hold onto the liberties that once distinguished Hong Kong from Beijing.
Lai was at the forefront of that fight. It is genuinely difficult to think of anyone whose story more clearly epitomizes both the promise of Hong Kong and what happens when that promise is broken. At 12 years old, Lai escaped to the city as a stowaway on a fishing boat after his mother was sent to work in a labor camp for the crime of being a "class enemy." He slept in rat-infested factories as a garment worker—until he was the one running them. His sweater brand, Giordano, became an international success and helped make Lai a billionaire.
Following the 1989 pro-democracy showdown in Tiananmen Square in Beijing, Lai founded two media companies—Next Magazine in 1990 and the Apple Daily in 1995—known for their irreverent coverage and unapologetic support for democracy, freedom of speech, and government reform.
China's "national security law" was, in other words, perfectly tailored to zero in on someone like Lai. The government leveraged it to freeze assets at the Apple Daily, arrest other employees, and eventually shutter it entirely. Prosecutors alleged Lai spearheaded a conspiracy to secure sanctions or blockades against China and Hong Kong, referencing meetings he had with U.S. officials like Vice President Mike Pence and Secretary of State Mike Pompeo. (Lai testified that he'd merely asked them to voice their support for the city's freedoms.) Authorities obtained a conviction on the third count—publishing seditious material—using colonial-era legislation to argue that Lai's publication incited people to rebel against the government.
Beyond the charges themselves, that "national security law" also paved the way for a trial with a foregone conclusion. Calling it a trial at all feels like a bit of a stretch, as it had no jury and was instead overseen by a panel of judges handpicked by the government. Nor was Lai permitted to pick an attorney of his choosing, which the Constitution there supposedly promises. All in all, the proceedings came amid a long-standing, ruthless pursuit of the businessman and activist, who was already serving a nearly-6-year sentence on flimsy fraud charges pertaining to a sublease for part of his newspaper office.
But for those who still doubt that Lai was targeted for his political expression, consider that he has company. Former Apple Daily Editor in Chief Law Wai-kwong, Executive Editor in Chief Lam Man-chung, and English Edition Managing Editor Fung Wai-kong received 10-year sentences; Yeung Ching-kee, an editorial writer, received seven years and three months; Associate Publisher Chan Pui-man got seven years; and CEO and Publisher Cheung Kim-hung was handed six years and nine months. This, unfortunately, isn't new. There are many others who have received draconian punishments for offending the Chinese government.
Lai had an advantage, however. He is a citizen of the United Kingdom, meaning he did not have to do this. He did not have to wait for law enforcement to come and take him, which was essentially guaranteed. And yet he continued to speak out against the government with the same vigor as those whose greatest risk is an unpleasant dinner.
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I am shocked, shocked! to discover that the CCP does not tolerate dissent, and shows it with show trials resulting in 20 year prison sentences.
Pussies!! Have they run out of bullets?
Better for the subversives to focus on the abuses in China than ever mention those in the US and UK honestly.
"National security" is the greatest whitewash for government action since the "God wills it" of feudal time.
Apropos: "Necessity is the plea of every infringement of human freedom. It is argument of tyrants. It is the creed of slaves." - William Pitt.
As much as protecting the kids or seniors.
Oh. I thought this was about European countries, and the wet dreams of the low IQ brainwashed far left Democrat cultists here in the US
They occupy a lot of your what little brain space you have
Trump's fault.
For sure.
TDS
Tarrio almost got 20 years for the fbi sending him a file then claiming he was attempting an insurrection for saying things they didnt like. Reason was silent.
Then all the non violent J6ers had to make fealty statements to get lowered sentences. Reason was silent.
China doesn't invite Reeeeason editors to cocktail parties.
Binion just wishes it had continued. Along with the rest of the Reason staff. This article from him is just hypocritical bullshit.
Probably should have included Mackey being sentenced to jail over a fucking meme. And reason was silent.
If j6 was Democrast you wouldn't say what you say because you are partisan nut, not American. You are right in the first sentence
Sounds like the Biden Administration.
Reason is all for this as long as democrats are the ones doing it.
Another with BDS. If Biden did any of the shit trump did you would be on here crying your eyes out.
You fuckers cheered the Alex Jones outcome. You cheered those associated with J6 getting retarded sentences for a protest, you cheer Leftists getting off for actual violence. Hell, you cunts were perfectly fine with government censorship so long as there was some corpo middleman getting squeezed and "making the decision" to make the assault stop. You all didn't warn of shit, you just warned that it might not be the fucking commies returning fire.
wahh WAAHHHH
J6 was a protest like OJ was innocent
I'm shocked and surprised that Billy Binion didn't blame Trump like everything else is his fault.
You have TDS
his conviction last year on two counts of conspiring to collude with foreign forces and one count of publishing seditious material. That rap sheet sounds ominous. It is, but not in the way it reads.
So the Chinese use these laws like the US does on whistleblowers.