Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Jimmy Lai Denied U.K. Human Rights Lawyer—Again
Jimmy Lai Denied U.K. Human Rights Lawyer—Again
Jan 16, 2026 3:35 PM

The Nobel Peace Prize–nominated Hong Konger has been dealt another legal blow in his defense against “foreign-collusion” charges under the Beijing-inspired National Security Law.

Read More…

Hong Kong’s Court of First Instance has rejected Jimmy Lai’s appeal challenging the denial of access to U.K. counsel. In November of last year, a national mittee denied Lai, a U.K. citizen, the right to add King’s Counsel Tim Owen, a veteran U.K. lawyer specializing in the rights of political prisoners, to his defense team. On May 10, Hong Kong legislatorspasseda bill handing plete control over decisions as to who can practice law in the city to the CCP-friendly chief executive, John Lee. The bill, dubbed the Legal Practitioners Amendment, gives Chief Executive Lee the decisive role in determining whether to admit foreign legal counsel in national security trials like Lai’s.

On Friday, Chief Judge of the High Court Jeremy Poon rejected Lai’s request to overturn mittee’s decision. Poon ruled that the courts have no jurisdiction mittee decisions under the terms of the Beijing-backed National Security Law, passed in 2020.

Lai’s Hong Kong lawyers had filed an application back in April for judicial review, requesting that the original national mittee decision to bar Owen be overturned, as mittee had overstepped its powers. “There is no power or jurisdiction to determine specific questions arising from cases, let alone overturn judicial decisions,” they insisted.

Nevertheless, Poon ruled that “The courts have neither the training nor expertise to deal with them in the exercise of their judicial function.”

All this is on the heels of Lai’s nomination, along with five other Hong Kong freedom fighters, for the Nobel Peace Prize. And on Tuesday, more than 100 journalists added their names to an Open Letter, which stated:

Together with Reporters Without Borders (RSF), we stand with Jimmy Lai. We believe he has been targeted for publishing independent reporting, and we condemn all charges against him. We call for his immediate release, for the national security charges against him to be dropped, and for his convictions on other charges to be overturned. We note that the case against Jimmy Lai takes place as part of a broader press freedom crackdown in Hong Kong, and are deeply concerned by the rapid deterioration of Hong Kong’s press freedom climate, as reflected in RSF’s World Press Freedom Index. We call for the immediate release of all 13 of the currently detained journalists, and for any remaining charges against all 28 journalists targeted under national security and other laws over the past three years to be dropped.

In addition, on May 18 Lai was awarded the Cato Institute’s Milton Friedman Price for Advancing Liberty.

Lai is currently being held in solitary confinement serving a five-year sentence for fraud, prosecuted last December. He faces a lifetime in prison on charges of conspiracy and foreign collusion as stipulated by the Beijing-backed National Security Law. His original arrest and imprisonment were spurred by his protests of CCP-inspired crackdowns on civil rights and press freedom in Hong Kong and his production of the pro-democracy newspaperApple Daily, shuttered in 2021.

The Hong Konger, the Acton Institute’s new award-winning documentary, tells the story of Jimmy Lai’s heroic struggle against authoritarian Beijing and its erosion of human rights in Hong Kong.Banned by TikTok, the film premiered worldwide on April 18, 2023, and is available in full on YouTubehere.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Samuel Gregg: ‘Truth has a way of making its presense felt’
Two writers over at Aleteia mented on the current state of affairs with the help of Samuel Gregg’s latest, Tea Party Catholic. Brantly Millegan, Assistant Editor for the English edition of Aleteia, write a post titled, ‘Obama’s Ordinary, No-Big-Deal “Whopper.”‘ He discusses the now infamous words President Obama spoke in 2010, “[I]f Americans like their doctor, they will keep their doctor. And if you like your insurance plan, you will keep it. No one will be able to take that...
From Too Big to Fail to Too Big to Flourish
“We hear a lot about ‘too big to fail’ banks and other financial institutions,” says Jordan Ballor in this week’s Acton Commentary. “But what about a federal government whose size and scope have e so vast as to crowd out civil institutions?” The existence of banks that are too big to fail is in significant ways the result of the actions of a government that is too big to flourish. Even a cursory glance at the federal spending figures over...
Pope Francis’ Vatican Seminar Tackles Human Trafficking
The 2013 Global Slavery Index estimates that 29.8 million people are enslaved worldwide. To help address this problem, Pope Francis called for action bat the growing problem of human trafficking and modern forms of slavery. At the pope’s request, Vatican officials and other experts met last weekend to discuss ways to better tackle the growing scourge of trafficking in humans and other forms of exploitation: Human trafficking is a crime against humanity that should be recognized as such and punished...
The Need for Counter-Majoritarian Makeweights
Drawing on some themes I explore about the role of the church in providing material assistance inGet Your Hands Dirty, today at Political Theology Today I look at the first parliamentary speech of the new Dutch King Willem-Alexander. In “The Dutch King’s Speech,” I argue that the largely ceremonial and even constitutionally-limited monarchy has something to offer modern democratic polities, in that it provides a forum for public leadership that is not directly dependent on popular electoral support. In the...
Envy and Wanting What Others Have
Over at the University Bookman today, I review John Lanchester’s novel Capital. I mend the book. I don’t explore it in the review, “Capital Vices and Commercial Virtues,” but for those who have been following the antics of Banksy, there is a similar performance artist character in the novel that has significance for the development of the narrative. As I write in the review, the vice of envy, captured in the foreboding phrase, “We Want What You Have,” animates the...
A Third Way Between Human and Bugger Malthusianism
I and Jordan Ballor have mented onEnder’s Game this week (here and here), but the story is literally packed with insightful themes, many of which touch upon issues relevant to Acton’s core principles. Another such issue is that of the problems with Neo-Malthusianism, the belief that overpopulation poses such a serious threat to civilization and the environment that population control measures e ethical imperatives. Such a perspective tends to rely on one or both of the following fallacies: a zero-sum...
Catholic Military Chaplaincy: War-Mongering Or Christlike Service?
Mark Scibilia-Carver, in a National Catholic Reporter “Viewpoint” piece, decries the nationwide call ing weekend for Catholics to financially support the Archdiocese for the Military Services, which serves the entire U.S. military. That includes “more than 220 installations in 29 countries, patients in 153 V.A. Medical Centers, and federal employees serving outside the boundaries of the USA in 134 countries. Numerically, the AMS is responsible for more than 1.8 million men, women, and children.” Why is Scibilia-Carver upset? He believes...
Does Advocating Limited Government Mean Abandoning the Poor?
Does promoting limited government require abandoning mitment to the poor? Ryan Messmore,whose answer is a firm “no”, argues that non-government institutions can provide personalized assistance to help individuals fix relational problems, e poverty and lead healthy lives: Calls for limited government are often mistakenly equated with a disregard for people in need. This flawed line of reasoning assumes that poverty is primarily a material problem and that government bears the primary responsibility for solving it by increasing welfare and entitlement...
Sid Meier, Slot Machines, and the Flow of Vice
My wife despises Sid Meier. She’s never met him, nor would she even recognize his name. But she knows someone is responsible for creating the source of my addiction. For over twenty years I’ve spent (or wasted, as my wife would say) countless hours playing Civilization, Meier’s award-winning strategy game. Every time I play the game I enter an almost trance-like state plete immersion. According to positive psychologist Mihály Csíkszentmihályi, what I’m experiencing in that moment is known as “flow.”...
Audio: Russell Kirk’s Final Public Lecture
Russell Kirk addresses the Acton Institute in Grand Rapids, Michigan – 1.10.94 On Saturday, November 9, the Intercollegiate Studies Institute is hosting a conference on the 60th Anniversary of Russell Kirk’sThe Conservative Mind.The conference, which will examine the impact of Kirk’s monumental book—which both named and shaped the nascent conservative movement in the United States—is to be held at the Eberhard Center on the downtown Grand Rapids campus of Grand Valley State University, which Acton supporters will recognize as the...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved