Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Jimmy Lai Fights the CCP for Access to Legal Counsel
Jimmy Lai Fights the CCP for Access to Legal Counsel
Jan 29, 2026 3:01 AM

Qualified lawyers could be the difference maker in Lai’s push for freedom.

Read More…

Jimmy Lai is one of the Chinese Communist Party’s most prominent targets, and for good reason. The 75-year-old Hong Kong entrepreneur now sits shackled in solitary confinement for the crime of fighting for democracy. Lai’s freedom may now hang on his access to top international lawyers, which the CCP has sought to curtail at every step of the legal process. Yet Lai remains mitted—if he can secure access to highly qualified legal professionals from around the world, his latest move could be a pivotal step in getting out of the prison he’s been forced to called home since December of 2020.

If Lai, who gained international attention as a key figure in Hong Kong’s pro-democracy movement in 2019/20, gets his lawyers, he still faces a difficult road to freedom. Under Beijing’s National Security Law, enacted in 2020 after a surge in pro-democracy protests across Hong Kong, he faces two counts of conspiracy with foreign forces and one count of foreign collusion. These charges could keep Lai in prison until his death.

As Lai fights to secure his release, a key hope for his legal team is veteran U.K. human rights lawyer Timothy Owen, a specialist in international law and the rights of political protestors. Although the Hong Kong High Court initially approved Owen’s admission, the Hong Kong government created massive pushback, arguing that allowing overseas lawyers in national security trials posed threats to Chinese state secrets. A decision from Beijing came in December: Hong Kong had the authority to bar overseas lawyers, and therefore Owen, from trials like Lai’s. Lai’s team has made their next move: they seek to quash the Beijing legislature’s judgment and maintain the possibility of admitting Lai’s star lawyer from the United Kingdom.

It’s a risky business. For Lai’s team to be successful, the CCP would have to cease its sweeping expansion of its national security powers in Hong Kong. The team argues that “the whole judicial administration would collapse” if such expansion continues, yet the Beijing legislature mitted to continuing its persecution of Lai. The former entrepreneur has e a symbol of fierce pro-democracy resistance to Xi Jinping’s regime. As such, he’s still a target; what started for Lai as a mere judicial proceeding has e an example of one man’s struggle against totalitarianism. When his trial resumes, Lai’s freedom and life are hanging in the balance.

The Hong Konger, the Acton Institute’s new documentary, tells the story of Jimmy Lai’s heroic struggle against authoritarian Beijing and its erosion of human rights in Hong Kong. The film premieres worldwide at on April 18, 2023, at 8pm ET.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Russian Warns on Demonic Roots of Socialism
In Rome to address a conference sponsored by the Dignitatis Humanae Institute (Institute for Human Dignity) on June 29, Russian pro-life campaigner Alexey Komov expressed amazement for the support that socialism gets in some quarters in the West even though it has “never worked in world history.” In an interview with the Zenit news service, Komov pointed to how this ideology had caused such great pain and suffering “all in the name of social reform, progress and improvement.” His criticism...
America the Acquisitive?
Last week, in ...
Balancing the “Big Three”
This week we feature an interview with Diane Paddison, Chief Strategy Officer for Cassidy Turley in Dallas, Texas. She is the founder of non-profit 4WORD and author of the book Work, Love, Pray; Practical Wisdom for Young Professional Christian Women. For resources and to get connected into munity, follow her on Twitter @4wordwomen and Facebook. Diane Paddison is something of an expert. Sure she can negotiate multi-million dollar deals for fortune panies, but that is not what I am talking...
Getting Religion Back into Our Economic Lives
National Review Online’s Kathryn Jean Lopez talks to Rev. Sirico about his new book, Defending the Free Market: The Moral Case for a Free Economy, the link between economic liberty and public morality, and the differences between socialism and capitalism: LOPEZ: How can you get more greed with socialism than capitalism? FR. SIRICO: To the extent that socialism holds back creativity and thus productivity, it increases poverty. When people e desperate, even good people can e self-centered. Few of us...
‘If there are people for whom to be Christian words alone would not suffice’
Comparing artists is about as helpful paring beer or theologians; it often es down to a matter of taste. However, just as with theologians, there are new insights to be gained from artists, even if they don’t turn out to be our favorite (I suppose the same holds with beer, as well.) Robert Royal, in an article for the Catholic Education Resource Center, poses the question of whether or not French poet Paul Claudel might be the best modern Catholic...
The Declaration of Independence and the Necessity of Religion
Last week’s Wall Street Journal features a column from Michael Meyerson detailing the religious perspective of the Declaration of Independence. With questions of religious liberty occupying a sizable space in the public square, the article is especially timely. According to Meyerson, the Declaration’s brilliance lies in the “theologically bilingual” language of the Framers. Phrases like “endowed by their Creator with certain inalienable rights” employ what he calls a nondenominational inclusivism, a show of rhetoric that neither endorses nor rejects any...
What life was like in 1776
During the Revolutionary Era, Americans had the highest per capita e in the civilized world and paid the lowest taxes, says Thomas Fleming, and they were determined to keep it that way. By 1776, the 13 American colonies had been in existence for over 150 years—more than enough time for the talented and ambitious to acquire money and land. At the top of the South’s earners were large planters such as George Washington. In the North their es were more...
‘Religion Takes us into the Marketplace’
On The Foundry, Sarah Torre writes about the many faith based challenges that remain to the Obamacare law. There are many organizations that are religious in nature, but are not themselves churches. ply with the new health laws, they will pelled to provide conscience violating services. Towards the end of the post, Torres quotes the president of Geneva College, Dr. Ken Smith: The issue that we have with the entire law is that the Obama Administration has tried to define...
Upcoming Scholarship Deadline
If you, or someone you know, are searching for last-minute scholarship opportunities, I invite you to please take the time to learn more about the scholarship programs offered through the Acton Institute. Through the Calihan Academic Fellowship program, Acton’s Research department offers scholarships and research grants from $500 to $3000 to graduate students and seminarians studying theology, philosophy, economics, or related fields. Applicants must demonstrate the potential to advance understanding in the relationship between theology and the principles of the...
Legatus Magazine & Acton Round-Up
The Acton Institute’s staff is heavily featured in the July/August issue of Legatus Magazine. First, there is a brief review of the Rev. Robert Sirico’s new book, ‘Defending the Free Market’: He shows why free-market capitalism is not only the best way to ensure individual success and national prosperity, but is also the surest route to a well-ordered society. Capitalism doesn’t only provide opportunity for material success, it ensures a more ethical and moral society as well. Next is Samuel...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved