Jimmy Lai, Former Hong Kong Media Tycoon, to Receive Sentence on Monday
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The Hong Kong High Court will sentence pro-democracy media tycoon Jimmy Lai on Monday, in a landmark national security case that has triggered condemnation from Western governments, including the United States.
Lai is set to stand before three judges, handpicked by Hong Kong’s pro-Beijing leader to oversee national security cases, at the West Kowloon Law Courts Building, according to the judiciary’s official website.
Under the draconian law, Lai could face a maximum penalty of life in prison.
Ahead of Monday’s court ruling, international rights supporters have renewed calls for Lai’s release.
“Jimmy Lai’s trial has been nothing but a charade from the start and shows total contempt for Hong Kong laws that are supposed to protect press freedom,” Beh Lih Yi, the Asia-Pacific director at the Committee to Protect Journalists, said in a statement on Feb. 6.
“Monday’s sentencing will go down in history as Hong Kong’s most shameful act of persecution of journalists and leave an indelible black mark on a city that was once the bastion of press freedom in Asia.”
Six former senior directors of Apple Daily, who have been detained for more than four years, are also scheduled to receive sentences on Monday, according to the court diary.
On Sunday night, dozens of Hongkongers had started lining up outside the court building to secure a seat in the courtroom, local media reported.
The sentencing of Lai, a British national, is scheduled less than two weeks after UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer visited to China. Starmer confirmed to British parliamentarians on Feb. 2 that he raised Lai’s case with Chinese leader Xi Jinping and explicitly called for his release.
“I asked to consider his release,” Trump said at a briefing shortly after Lai’s conviction. “He’s not well. He’s an older man, and he’s not well. So I did put that request out. We'll see what happens.”


