Hong Kong court begins hearing final arguments in Jimmy Lai's national
security trial
[August 18, 2025]
By KANIS LEUNG
HONG KONG (AP) — A Hong Kong court heard final arguments Monday in the
landmark national security trial of former pro-democracy newspaper
founder Jimmy Lai, who could be sentenced to up to life in prison if he
is convicted.
Lai, 77, was arrested in 2020 under a national security law imposed by
Beijing following anti-government protests in 2019. He is being tried on
charges of colluding with foreign forces to endanger national security
and conspiring with others to issue seditious publications.
Lai founded Apple Daily, one of the local media outlets that was most
critical of Hong Kong's government. His high-profile case that has
stretched nearly 150 days, almost double the original estimate, is
widely seen as a trial of press freedom and a test for judicial
independence in the Asian financial hub.
It is unclear when a verdict will be delivered.
Arguments highlight alleged sanction calls
Prosecutor Anthony Chau said on Monday that Lai was arrested for
collusion in August 2020, but he continued to make requests for
sanctions, a blockade or other hostile activities in the following
months.
Chau suggested that the appeals for foreign actions did not only target
individuals, but also China, while the foreign collaborations Lai had
were long-term and persistent.

A prosecution document shown in court argued that the law doesn't
prohibit normal international exchanges. But how Lai attempted to draw
an analogy of what he did to the cooperation between Hong Kong's
prosecuting authority and the International Association of Prosecutors
was bewildering.
“It is surprising to see that D1 (Lai) raised freedoms of thought and
association as his shield,” it said in the document.
Chau is expected to wrap up his closing statement Tuesday.
Earlier in the trial, prosecutors alleged Lai asked foreign countries,
especially the United States, to take actions against Beijing “under the
guise of fighting for freedom and democracy.”
On the first day of his testimony, Lai denied he had asked then-Vice
President Mike Pence and then-Secretary of State Mike Pompeo to take
action against Hong Kong and China during the 2019 protests.
When Lai's lawyer questioned him about an Apple Daily report saying he
had asked the U.S. government to sanction Beijing and Hong Kong leaders,
he said he must have discussed it with Pompeo, as he had no reason to
doubt the accuracy of the report by the now-defunct newspaper he
founded.
But Lai said he would not have encouraged foreign sanctions after the
national security law was enacted on June 30, 2020.

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Hong Kong media tycoon Jimmy Lai pauses during an interview in Hong
Kong on July 1, 2020. (AP Photo/Vincent Yu, File)

Lai's health causes delay
Closing arguments have been delayed twice, first due to the weather
then to concerns over Lai's health. On Friday, his lawyer, Robert
Pang, said Lai had experienced heart palpitations while in prison.
The judges wanted him to secure a heart monitor and medication
first.
After Friday’s hearing, the Hong Kong government alleged foreign
media outlets had attempted to mislead the public about Lai's
medical care. It said a medical examination of Lai found no
abnormalities and that the medical care he received in custody was
adequate.
When Lai entered the courtroom on Monday, he waved and smiled to
those sitting in the public gallery and briefly instructed his legal
team in a voice audible to public attendees. He closed his eyes for
a while in the morning when the prosecution laid out its legal
arguments.
The heart monitor was delivered to Lai and he had no complaints
about his health, Chau said.
Case draws attention from foreign governments
Lai's yearslong detention in solidarity confinement has drawn
concerns from foreign governments and rights groups. U.S. President
Donald Trump, before being elected to his second term in November,
said he would talk to Chinese leader Xi Jinping to seek Lai's
release: “I will get him out.”
In a Fox News radio interview released Aug. 14, Trump denied saying
he would save Lai, but rather that he would bring the issue up.
“I’ve already brought it up, and I’m going to do everything I can to
save him,” he said.

China has accused Lai of stirring a rise in anti-China sentiments in
Hong Kong and said it firmly opposes the interference of other
countries in its internal affairs.
Dozens of people waited in the rain Monday for a seat in the main
courtroom to see Lai. Former Apple Daily reader Susan Li said she
worried about Lai's health as he looked visibly thinner and she
would continue to pray for him.
“I wanted to let him know we are still here,” she said.
When Hong Kong, a former British colony, returned to China in 1997,
Beijing promised to retain the city’s civil liberties for 50 years.
But critics say the promise has become threadbare after the
introduction of the security law, which Chinese and Hong Kong
authorities insist was necessary for the city’s stability.
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