Realistic courtroom scene from Jimmy Lai's Hong Kong national security trial, featuring the defendant, judges, evidence, police security, and international observers.
Realistic courtroom scene from Jimmy Lai's Hong Kong national security trial, featuring the defendant, judges, evidence, police security, and international observers.
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Jimmy Lai Trial: Courtroom Dynamics, Evidence, and Wider Crackdown

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Following Jimmy Lai’s conviction on national security and sedition charges on December 15, 2025, details from his months-long trial highlight the evidence presented, tight security, international observers, and the case’s role in Hong Kong’s broader clampdown on dissent.

The national security trial of Jimmy Lai, founder of the now-closed pro-democracy newspaper Apple Daily, was held without a jury before a panel of three judges designated to hear such cases at Hong Kong’s West Kowloon court complex. Lai, 78, was found guilty on December 15, 2025, of conspiracy to collude with foreign forces and publishing seditious materials, and now faces a possible life sentence under Hong Kong’s National Security Law and colonial-era sedition statutes, according to multiple news outlets and rights groups.

The proceedings, which began in December 2023 after repeated delays, stretched over many months and became one of the most closely watched national security cases since the law took effect in 2020. Rights organizations, including Amnesty International, say prosecutors relied heavily on Lai’s media and public advocacy — including Apple Daily articles calling for foreign sanctions, his meetings with overseas politicians, interviews with international media, and his posts and follower lists on X, formerly Twitter — as core evidence that his journalism and lobbying amounted to criminal conduct under the National Security Law.

Lai has been in custody since December 2020 after his arrest under the security law, and had already been convicted in separate cases involving unauthorized assemblies and fraud, receiving combined prison terms of more than seven years. Human rights groups report that he has spent much of this period in highly restrictive conditions, including prolonged solitary confinement, and have raised concerns about his deteriorating health as the trial and pretrial detention dragged on.

The courtroom was subject to heightened security, with police presence inside and outside the West Kowloon courthouse. International diplomats, journalists and observers regularly attended the hearings, which were conducted before three national security judges rather than a jury — a feature of Hong Kong’s security regime that critics say erodes long-standing common-law protections. Lai pleaded not guilty and denied encouraging violence or foreign sanctions, insisting that Apple Daily’s coverage represented the aspirations of Hong Kong residents for greater freedoms and arguing that his calls for international attention did not amount to criminal collusion.

Lai’s conviction has drawn sharp criticism from foreign governments and advocacy groups, which describe the case as emblematic of a wider crackdown on dissent since Beijing imposed the National Security Law in June 2020. As of mid‑2025, official and independent tallies indicate that more than 300 people have been arrested under the National Security Law, the newer Safeguarding National Security Ordinance and related sedition provisions, with well over 150 convictions. In a separate landmark case earlier in 2025, 45 pro-democracy figures involved in unofficial primary elections for the city’s legislature received prison sentences of up to around 10 years for conspiracy to commit subversion.

Sentencing in Lai’s case is expected to follow additional court hearings and mitigation submissions in early 2026. Rights groups and foreign officials argue that the outcome will not only determine the fate of one of Hong Kong’s most prominent media figures, but also signal how far the city’s authorities intend to go in using national security laws to reshape the territory’s political and media landscape.

Hvad folk siger

X discussions on Jimmy Lai's conviction on national security and sedition charges are sharply divided. Pro-Beijing voices, including Hong Kong lawmakers, hail the verdict as a triumph of rule of law and evidence-based justice protecting stability. Western politicians, journalists, and human rights advocates denounce it as a rigged political trial silencing dissent and press freedom. Concerns for Lai's health and calls for his release feature prominently amid international condemnation.

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Jimmy Lai in Hong Kong courtroom after guilty verdict on security charges, with contrasting international protests outside.
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Jimmy Lai security trial: International condemnation follows guilty verdict

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Following Jimmy Lai's conviction on national security charges, as reported earlier, global reactions have intensified. The US and UK demand his release, citing political persecution, while Hong Kong and Chinese officials defend the ruling as upholding the law. Sentencing is pending.

Three judges in Hong Kong have convicted media tycoon Jimmy Lai on all counts in his national security trial, which lasted more than a year and a half. Lai denied two counts of conspiracy to collude with foreign forces and one of conspiracy to print seditious articles. Sentencing details will follow written mitigation submissions due in early January.

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A Hong Kong court sentenced pro-democracy publisher Jimmy Lai to 20 years in prison on February 9, 2026, under Beijing's national security law for conspiring to collude with foreign forces and publishing seditious material. The 78-year-old media tycoon and six former Apple Daily executives were among those imprisoned in a case drawing sharp international condemnation as a politically motivated crackdown.

Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Guo Jiakun stated at a regular press briefing that Jimmy Lai should be severely punished according to the law and accused external forces of interfering in Hong Kong's judicial process and China's internal affairs. The remarks responded to Washington's hopes for Lai's release on humanitarian grounds and speculation about easing Hong Kong-related sanctions. The ministry urged the US to safeguard stable China-US relations and peace in the Taiwan Strait.

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The Seoul Central District Court is set to deliver a verdict on Wednesday on charges that former Prime Minister Han Duck-soo abetted former President Yoon Suk Yeol's failed martial law imposition. Han will be the first member of Yoon's Cabinet to face sentencing over the December 3, 2024, emergency order. Prosecutors seek a 15-year prison term, while Han denies the allegations.

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A Hong Kong court has sentenced 69-year-old Kwok Yin-sang to eight months in prison for attempting to cash out an insurance policy belonging to his daughter, US-based activist Anna Kwok, in a ruling that breached national security law. This marks the first conviction of a family member of a wanted activist under such charges.

 

 

 

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