Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Jimmy Lai Pushes to Halt National Security Trial
Jimmy Lai Pushes to Halt National Security Trial
Oct 5, 2024 9:18 PM

As the democracy activist is denied a jury trial, his defense team pushes for justice.

Read More…

Mere days after bringing a veteran British litigator on his legal team, jailed Hong Kong entrepreneur Jimmy Lai is moving to halt the trial proceedings entirely.

In a pretrial interview, the 74-year-old Lai came before three National Security judges to review the charges brought against him. Lai’s trial, slated to begin in early December, is to be heard by a panel of judges instead of a jury, which is more typical, with the Hong Kong Free Press reporting that “under the national security law, a jury can be excluded under reasons such as the need to protect state secrets or the safety of members of the jury and their families.”

In light of this abnormality, Lai’s defense team will file applications to stay the trial, with senior counsel Robert Pang planning to file all submissions by Friday, November 18.

Under the country’s National Security Law, imposed on Hong Kong by Beijing in 2020 in the wake of pro-democracy protests in Hong Kong, Lai faces three charges: one count of colluding with foreign forces and two of colluding with foreign countries/elements. Aside from that, Lai’s pro-democracy media work with pany Next Digital and newspaper Apple Daily landed the former clothing mogul with a sedition charge. If convicted, Lai could be sentenced to spend the rest of his life in a prison.

As Lai pushes to halt the trial, three panies connected with Apple Daily are also standing trial for sedition. Apple Daily Limited, Apple Daily Printing Limited, and Apple Daily Internet Limited each face a sedition charge for published content, as well as a charge of colluding with foreign forces. Several former staff members at Next Digital and Apple Daily who previously pled guilty to violations of the National Security Law and sedition laws are scheduled to begin their trials in late November.

Lai’s story has generated renewed attention from the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ), an American nonprofit. CPJ members and various other advocates for press freedom recently penned a letter to the chief executive’s office in Hong Kong calling for Lai’s release. “Exercising your authority to drop the charges against Jimmy Lai and free him immediately is a crucial step toward regaining global confidence in Hong Kong,” the letter reads, calling on authorities to remember mitments to cement “Hong Kong’s role as a global financial hub, for which a free press and judicial independence are vital elements. Lai’s imprisonment … ha[s] seriously undermined the confidence in the city’s judiciary and the rule of law.”

The Hong Konger, the Acton Institute’s new documentary, tells the story of Jimmy Lai’s heroic struggle against authoritarian Beijing and its erosion of human rights in Hong Kong. It is currently being screened in cities around the world.

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
Sponsor a Child, Change the World
There are over 8 million internationally sponsored children in the world. With the average monthly sponsorship level set at about $30 (not including other gifts sent to sponsored children), the flow of resources from wealthy countries to poor countries from international child sponsorships is about $3.2 billion per year. Despite the substantial amounts of money being funneled through these child-sponsorship charities, few empirical studies have been conducted to gauge their effectiveness. Earlier this yearpeer-reviewed, independent studyon the viability of international...
Take This Job and Shove It, Faulkner-Style
Courtesy today’s edition of Prufrock, a fine daily newsletter edited by Micah es this classic resignation letter from William Faulkner, onetime postmaster at the University of Mississippi: [October, 1924] As long as I live under the capitalistic system, I expect to have my life influenced by the demands of moneyed people. But I will be damned if I propose to be at the beck and call of every itinerant scoundrel who has two cents to invest in a postage stamp....
‘No Religion, Please. We’re European.’
It is no secret that Europe is ing less and less religious. A 2010 survey stated that only about half of Europe’s citizens believed in God, with some places (such as Sweden and the Czech Republic) registering belief in only about 20 percent of the population. And it’s not just that less people believe; it’s that there is growing hostility to religion in the EU. Take for example Slovakia. The National Bank of Slovakia has ordered the removal of religious...
Follow Acton University on Twitter
Acton University is happening all week, so if you’d like to read what our attendees are up to, follow the #ActonU hashtag on Twitter. You can bookmark the feed and check back later, or search for the #ActonU hashtag on one of the various Twitter apps for Apple, Android, Windows Phone, or Blackberry. If you’re at the event, use the tag to let others know what you’re learning! Click here to view #ActonU on Twitter. ...
Edd Noell: Early Christians on Wealth and Poverty
This morning at Acton University I attended a fascinating lecture by Dr. Edd Noell, “Origins of Economics: The Scriptures and Early Church Fathers.” I have briefly examined one ancient Christian perspective on wealth in the past (here), but Dr. Noell’s survey today was far more expansive. For the benefit of PowerBlog readers, I would like to reflect on some of the major themes of his talk here as a sort of preview of what one could expect once the audio...
Video: Marina Nemat’s Keynote Address at Acton University 2013
Marina Nemat gave her keynote address last night at AU entitled, “Finding Christ in an Iranian Prison.” Watch below. ...
Fr. Michael Butler: Orthodoxy, Church, and State
The double-headed eagle is a historical symbol of symphonia. Today at Acton University, Fr. Michael Butler examined the history of Church-State relations in the Orthodox Tradition with special reference to the modern, Russian context in his lecture “Orthodoxy, Church, and State.” The audio of his lecture will be available via Ancient Faith Radio sometime in ing weeks. As a teaser, I would like to briefly examine two concepts of Orthodox political theory to which Fr. Butler devoted specific attention: symphonia...
Sweden’s Riots, ‘Good Socialism,’ and the Importance of Earned Success
Over at theValues & Capitalism blog, I recently shared some of the more memorable quotes from P.J. O’Rourke’s remarkable chapter on Sweden in his 1999 book, Eat the Rich: A Treatise on Economics. What’s most notable about O’Rourke’s analysis is that it largely avoids the typical arguments about whether the Swedish system “works” — whether mouths are fed, entitlements are sustainable, healthcare is accessible, etc. — pondering, instead, what kind of spirit bubbles beneath its shiny skin: Even O’Rourke is...
Pathological Altruism: When ‘Good Intentions’ Aren’t So Good
In a new paper, “Concepts and Implications of Altruism Bias and Pathological Altruism,” Barbara Oakley of Oakland University argues that scientists and social observers have mostly ignored the harm that e from altruism. Though “the profound benefits of altruism in modern society are self-evident,” Oakley observes, the “potential hurtful aspects of altruism have gone largely unrecognized in scientific inquiry.” Aiming to lay the groundwork for such inquiry, Oakley focuses on what she calls “pathological altruism” — “altruism in which attempts...
Scott Rae on How Business Serves the Common Good
In a lecture at Acton University titled “Business and the Common Good,” Dr. Scott Rae of Biola University examined the role of business in serving mon good. Rae began by examining some of mon criticisms lobbed against business, namely, that it promotes greed, inequality, and consumerism. As Michael Miller often notes, these are human vices, not economic ones, and thus business, properly understood, is not immoral in and of itself. On the contrary, business has great potential for serving and...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2024 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved