Pro-Beijing media in Hong Kong denounce 'traitor' Jimmy Lai
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[June 23, 2021]
By Sharon Abratique
HONG KONG (Reuters) - Pro-Beijing
newspapers have ramped up criticism of jailed media tycoon Jimmy Lai,
with illustrations portraying him as a "dog-like animal" and a
shoe-shiner doing the bidding of the United States.
The attacks have intensified since 500 officers raided Lai's
pro-democracy Apple Daily newspaper and authorities charged two
executives under a national security law last week, drawing condemnation
from Western countries and global rights groups..
A 24-page pull-out section published by the Wen Wei Po newspaper on
Wednesday features a picture of staunch Beijing critic Lai on the front
page with the headline: "Crime - Record of Awful Behaviour of China
Traitor Lai at Poisonous Apple."
Inside, a drawing depicts Lai as a "dog-like animal" with an enlarged
head, tiger teeth and an American flag wrapped around his four-legged
body.
"Don't underestimate my tiger teeth, authentic U.S. goods they are,"
reads the caption.
Another cartoon shows Lai wearing an American top hat, smoking a cigar
while riding a human-legged donkey with "Independence" stickers on it
and holding a fishing rod dangling bundles of cash. The caption reads:
"Fishing skills."
Next to photographs of Lai when he met former U.S. vice-president Mike
Pence and former national security adviser John Bolton, another drawing
shows the tycoon wearing a boxing glove, with an American flag design.
Next to that is the shoe-shining cartoon with Lai holding up a
microphone to a person wearing trousers depicting the U.S. flag with the
caption: "Big brother, just speak out any time if I'm not serving up to
standard."
Lai, 73, and two of his senior executives have been charged under
sweeping security legislation that Beijing imposed on the former British
colony a year ago on suspicion of collusion with foreign forces, a crime
punishable with up to life in prison.
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Media mogul Jimmy Lai, founder of Apple Daily, leaves the Court of
Final Appeal by prison van in Hong Kong, China February 9, 2021.
REUTERS/Tyrone Siu/File Photo
Lai is in jail on charges of illegal assembly
stemming from pro-democracy protests last year.
Lai has been a fierce critic of Beijing for decades and has called
for other countries to take a tough stand with the Chinese
government in the hope of sustaining the city's freedoms.
A centre-page spread in the Ta Kung Pao newspaper on Monday listed
what it described as "100 Lies of Apple Daily" since it was first
published 26 years ago, including what it said were misleading
headlines and "rumours" of police violence.
Wen Wei Po and Ta Kung Pao, widely regarded as mouthpieces for
Beijing, regularly publish pictures of democracy activists on their
front pages and often denounce "foreign interference" in Hong Kong's
affairs.
Their criticism of democracy campaigners has become much more
pronounced since Beijing imposed the security legislation on its
freest city after months of sometimes violent pro-democracy
protests.
Supporters of the security law say it has restored stability
essential for preserving the financial hub's economic success.
(Reporting By Sharon Abratique; Writing by Anne Marie Roantree;
Editing by Robert Birsel)
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