202312.18
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Trial Begins for Jimmy Lai, Hong Kong Catholic Activist Imprisoned for 3 Years

Daniel Payne

December 18, 2023

Original Article

His imprisonment has drawn sharp rebukes and calls for clemency from supporters including Catholic bishops.

The trial for Jimmy Lai, the Catholic Hong Kong activist and newspaper publisher, opened Monday, launching what is expected to be a protracted legal exhibition capping several years of imprisonment for the embattled pro-democracy advocate.

Lai has been an outspoken advocate of human rights and democratic freedoms in Hong Kong for years. He founded the tabloid Apple Daily in 1995, which took a strong pro-democracy stance in the administrative region.

The activist was originally arrested in August 2020 under that year’s controversial national security law, which was passed by China’s communist-controlled government. The law sharply curtailed free speech in the region in an effort to quash what the Chinese Communist Party considered subversion and sedition in the separately administered region of Hong Kong.

Lai himself was accused of colluding with foreign adversaries and conspiracy to defraud. The law’s harsh penalties include life in prison for what the government deems sedition or terrorism, including acts such as damaging public transport facilities.

He has spent more than 1,000 days in prison since his arrest. His imprisonment has drawn sharp rebukes and calls for clemency from supporters including Catholic bishops. The Catholic University of America in 2022 awarded him an honorary degree after his imprisonment. A film about Lai released earlier this year, meanwhile, amassed more than 1 million views on YouTube and over 4 million views on TikTok in just two weeks.

A Catholic convert, Lai has been vocal in his faith. He was baptized and received into the Church by Cardinal Joseph Zen, bishop emeritus of Hong Kong, in 1997. He said in 2020 that his decision to stay in Hong Kong and place himself in danger was informed by his belief in God.

“If I go away, I not only give up my destiny, I give up God, I give up my religion, I give up what I believe in,” he said.

Trial Beginning Monday Could Bring Life Sentence for Lai

The start of Lai’s trial in Hong Kong sees the activist facing charges of foreign collusion and the publication of seditious materials under the national security law. He faces a potential life sentence if convicted.

Lai has drawn support from a wide variety of advocates in the U.S. and around the world who argue that the trial is a sham meant to enforce political persecution on Lai and others who might speak out against Chinese Communist authorities.

Father Robert Sirico, a Catholic priest and the founder of the Michigan-based Acton Institute for the Study of Religion and Liberty, told CNA in a phone interview that he was leery of the prospect of a not-guilty verdict in the trial.

“When was the last time you saw a totalitarian government put someone through their court system and have them come out innocent?” Father Sirico asked. “I’m at a loss for thinking of an example of that.”

“I don’t have any hope that they’re going to change their mind on it,” he said of Chinese authorities. “We’ve tried to generate support, and we have around the world, but it hasn’t gotten the visibility of a Sharansky or Mandela situation.”

“It’s significant to me that Lai is a journalist,” Sirico said. “I think journalists should have had this on the front burner.”

Lai, Father Sirico argued, is “manifestly not guilty of treason.”

“He loves China,” he said. “He simply was exercising free speech rights.”

But Lai has “several things going against him,” Father Sirico argued, including his belief in capitalism and his proactive demonstrations in favor of freedom.

“He’s a Catholic. And we see what the posture of the Chinese government is to religion in general, and Catholicism in particular.