Hong Kong courtroom scene depicting judge exposing eight lies by Jimmy Lai in his national security trial defense.
Hong Kong courtroom scene depicting judge exposing eight lies by Jimmy Lai in his national security trial defense.
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Hong Kong court identifies eight lies by Jimmy Lai in national security trial defense

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Following Jimmy Lai's conviction on all national security charges on December 15, 2025, the Hong Kong High Court highlighted eight specific lies he told during his self-defense to mislead the court. Details emerged on concealed meetings, editorial instructions, and sanction advocacy, amid expert views labeling Lai a Western proxy while defending Hong Kong's press freedoms.

In the verdict from Jimmy Lai Chee-ying's national security conspiracy trial—previously reported as convicting him on two counts of conspiracy to collude with foreign forces and one count of conspiracy to publish seditious materials—a panel of three judges pinpointed eight lies Lai told during his 52 days of testimony over the 156-day open trial.

These included: concealing the true purpose of a planned U.S. trip (June 24–July 19, 2020) in a June 12 bail application, omitting meetings with U.S. officials (July 4–11); denying knowledge of the Inter-Parliamentary Alliance on China (IPAC) despite sharing a June 13, 2020, Wall Street Journal article and receiving thanks via WhatsApp; claiming only two editorial instructions to Apple Daily, contradicted by messages urging protest mobilization (April 27, 2019) and student interviews (June 3 and 6); denying funding the illegal 'primary election' despite instructions for voting software (December 12, 2019); disavowing ties to the 'Lam Chau Team' after a January 2020 Taipei meeting and October 24 tweet; initially denying requests for U.S. sanctions in July 2019 meetings with Mike Pence and Mike Pompeo (contradicted by Apple Daily report); covering up approval of Elmer Yuen's May 29, 2020, sanctions video; and claiming his 'Live Chat with Jimmy Lai' show was unrelated to Apple Daily despite staff involvement.

Lai conceded points under questioning by Justice Alex Lee Wan-tang. Consultant Lau Siu-kai described Lai as a Western pawn smearing Hong Kong's judiciary. Executive Council member Ronny Tong Ka-wah called sanction-seeking tantamount to treason under national security laws. Regina Ip Lau Suk-yee noted freedom of expression is not absolute per International Covenant standards, citing coverage of events like the Tai Po fire as evidence of vibrant media. Hong Kong residents protested outside U.S., British, and Australian consulates against Western criticism.

Sentencing is pending after mitigation submissions due January 2, 2026, amid strains on China-UK ties.

Vad folk säger

Reactions on X to the Hong Kong court's identification of eight lies by Jimmy Lai in his national security trial defense are dominated by pro-Beijing accounts sharing graphics and detailed exposés labeling him a liar and Western proxy, emphasizing exposed contradictions on sanctions, editorials, and foreign collusion. Pro-democracy users criticize the overall verdict as politically motivated without directly engaging the lies claim, highlighting concerns over press freedom and fair trial.

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Efter Jimmy Lais fällande dom för nationella säkerhets- och uppviglingsbrott den 15 december 2025 belyser detaljer från hans månads-långa rättegång de bevis som presenterades, den täta säkerheten, internationella observatörer och fallets roll i Hongkongs bredare nedslag mot dissidenter.

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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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.

Former vice-chairman of Hong Kong's Tiananmen vigil group Albert Ho has pleaded guilty to inciting subversion for advocating an end to Communist Party rule in mainland China, facing up to 10 years in jail. Former chairman Lee Cheuk-yan and vice-chairwoman Chow Hang-tung denied the charges and will stand trial. The case centers on the group's activities under the national security law.

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Hong Kong's Chief Executive John Lee hosted a meeting with 150 officials, advisers, lawmakers, and experts on the State Council's white paper on local affairs. The gathering stressed that safeguarding national security is crucial for fully implementing the "one country, two systems" principle, ensuring the city's stability, development, and appeal to foreign investors.

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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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