Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Pro-democracy activist Jimmy Lai to receive the 2021 Gwen Ifill Press Freedom Award
Pro-democracy activist Jimmy Lai to receive the 2021 Gwen Ifill Press Freedom Award
Oct 28, 2025 1:40 AM

The entrepreneur’s fight for a free press and human rights in an increasingly authoritarian Hong Kong is recognized yet again, even as he sits in jail for violating the draconian National Security Law.

Read More…

At the annual International Press Freedom Awards, the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) will honor Jimmy Lai, longtime Acton friend and outspoken political dissident in Hong Kong, with the 2021 Gwen Ifill Press Freedom Award.

The annual event, set to take place Nov. 18, presents the award to a recipient chosen by CPJ’s board of directors, to honor one who exemplifies “extraordinary and mitment to press freedom,” the Committee’s press release stated.

“Jimmy Lai is not just a champion of a free press, he is a press freedom warrior. He fights for the right of his Apple News organization to publish freely, even as China and its backers in Hong Kong use every tool to quash them,” said Kathleen Carroll, chair of CPJ’s board. “The CPJ board is pleased to honor Jimmy Lai with the 2021 Gwen Ifill Press Freedom Award. And we look forward to the day when we can present that award to him in person,” the press release added.

Lai is currently serving a 20-month prison sentence on charges under Hong Kong’s wide-sweeping National Security Law (NSL). The law, imposed in June 2020, puts into practice Beijing’s intensifying crackdown on all forms of political dissent.

However, Lai’s convictions have remained unappealable in the face of Hong Kong’s intimidating and increasingly authoritarian rule and stifling of human rights in pursuit of absolute control of its citizenry.

The Acton Institute awarded Lai with its 2020 Faith and Freedom Award. In its press release at the time, Acton declared that “Lai’s sterling character in the face of totalitarian adversity deserves all the plaudits we can muster. For that reason, we have awarded Lai our 2020 Faith and Freedom Award.”

After the Tiananmen Square Massacre in 1995, Lai founded the pro-democracy media group Next Digital Media and its subsidiary news service, Apple Daily, in opposition to the increasing reach of Hong Kong’s government and restrictions on human rights.

Hong Kong authorities took notice of the newspaper’s popularity. This past June, Hong Kong police raided Apple Daily’s headquarters, froze HK$18 million (USD$2.3 million), seized pany’s documents, and forced the newspaper to fold the next week.

Additionally, many Next Digital board members have been arrested on charges under the NSL. Remaining members have resigned in fear of violating the draconian law.

Lai is a living example mitment to the dignity of the human person. The CPJ’s recognition of his fight to safeguard human flourishing contributes to the effort to continue his struggle to revitalize the rights of Hong Kong’s citizens.

More information on the Gwen Ifill Award and the CPJ International Press Freedom event can be found on their website.

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
‘God Makes No Mistakes’
‘God Makes No Mistakes’ You may not know it, but Loretta Lynn is a pretty good theologian. She’s so good, in fact, that some contemporary theologians, open theists like Clark Pinnock, for example, could take some lessons in orthodoxy. The lyrics to a song off her most recent record, Van Lear Rose, that illustrates her high view of God. Here are the words to “God Makes No Mistakes”: Why, I’ve heard people say Why is this tree bent Why they...
Surviving socialism
In this month’s issue of Esquire, Ken Kurson extols the virtues of Sanofi-Aventis, the world’s third largest pany. “A Drugmaker reborn” (subscription required) essentially describes why Kurson thinks Sanofi is a great investment, but between his praises of pany sits this tidbit: And yet controlling costs is one of the things I like best about Sanofi. It’s why I believe in its strategy of growth through acquisition. And it’s why I think the merger with Aventis will be so effective....
Last week
Power corrupts…and upsets babies. Just in case anyone missed (or didn’t miss) my posting last week, I was on vacation following the birth of my first child, a son, on May 30 (Memorial Day). Owen Flynn Ballor 9 lbs., 2 oz. 20.5 inches 5/30/05 10:10 pm ...
An interview with Karen Woods
The Roundtable on Religion & Social Policy interviewed Acton’s Karen Woods, director of the Center for Effective Compassion (CEC) this week. Woods spoke about the work of the CEC, including the Samaritan Award, and also gave her perspective on the federal Faith-Based and Community Initiative. She says in part, With welfare reform in ’96, and certainly the waivers that preceded that in certain states, there was a change in the way that we looked at social services. Suddenly, work was...
Live 8: Saving Africa?
Much has been written in recent weeks about Live 8, a series of concerts that will take place on July 6 in London, Paris, Berlin, Rome and Philadelphia. The name refers not only to the original Live Aid concerts that took place in 1985, but is also a reference to the G8 meetings that will be taking place in Edinburgh, Scotland at the same time as the concerts. G8 organizers are planning for massive protests which have been urged on...
‘Monkey Business’
In the latest issue of the New York Times Magazine, the article “Monkey Business,” by Stephen J. Dubner and Steven D. Levitt examines economist Keith Chen’s research with capuchin monkeys and money. Here’s another case of science, in this case economics, being used to “prove” the continuity between (and therefore equivalency of) humans and animals. The implicit message is that we are really not all that different from our fellow creatures, nor that special. This seems almost absurd, but it’s...
Good question
Edward Southerland wonders, “Does the job description for school administrators require that you leave mon sense at home when you go to work?” One of the reasons he asks the question: In Tennessee, the student giving the valedictory speech started with a joke. “You have given us the minimum required attention span to master any station at any McDonald’s anywhere.” The next line was “Of course, I’m only kidding. Eagleville is a fine institution of higher learning with a superb...
Corporate blogging
The AP passes along this story about the use of blogs by corporations and executives. Some of the good advice includes: “Don’t go toward fake blogs. Don’t launch character blogs. Use a blog for what it’s for, transparency,” said Steve Rubel, vice president of client services at CooperKatz & Co., a New York PR firm. … He and other PR professionals can rattle off blogs gone wrong — usually “fake blogs” that stir up the ire of bloggers by hiding...
Google’s memory
Google recently surpassed Time Warner as the world’s top media stock. Google provides services to about 19 million users per day. People go to Google to find things, participate in discussions via online forums, to check and send email, driving directions, and a host of other services. That is a lot of information about a lot of people…where does it all go? Apparently, Google keeps it all! What is the cost of this data collection? How much of our own...
Colson speaks at Calvin Seminary Spring Banquet
Colson speaks at Calvin Seminary’s Spring Banquet. Chuck Colson, founder of Prison Fellowship, spoke at Calvin Theological Seminary’s Spring Banquet, endorsing the school’s Dutch neo-Calvinist heritage. “Calvin Theological Seminary is an underappreciated asset in the evangelical world. There’s nothing the evangelical world needs more than a bracing dose of Kuyperian theology,” he said. The speech also marked the announcement of the establishment of the Charles W. Colson Presidential Chair at the seminary. Thanks to a major gift from the Richard...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved