Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Jimmy Lai Denied Counsel Yet Again as Power Shifts to Pro-CCP Exec
Jimmy Lai Denied Counsel Yet Again as Power Shifts to Pro-CCP Exec
Apr 14, 2026 5:29 AM

One more obstacle has been put in the way of securing justice for Hong Kong’s most famous and outspoken voice for freedom.

Read More…

Jimmy Lai is Hong Kong’s most persecuted freedom fighter. Jailed in December 2020 for the crime of protesting the Chinese Communist Party’s clampdown on civil rights in Hong Kong, the 75-year-old fashion mogul and entrepreneur faces the possibility of life in prison if convicted of violating the CCP’s National Security Law, which took effect in June 2020. Lai’s path to freedom involves securing access to King’s Counsel Tim Owen, a veteran U.K. lawyer specializing in the rights of political prisoners—and the CCP has done everything in its power to keep that from happening.

The Lai case hit yet another snag on Wednesday as Hong Kong legislators passed a bill handing plete control over decisions as to who can practice law in the city to the CCP-friendly chief executive, John Lee. The bill, dubbed the Legal Practitioners Amendment, gives Chief Executive Lee the decisive role in whether to admit foreign legal counsel in national security trials like Lai’s. Lee is a decisively pro-Beijing figure, having received plaudits from Xi Jinping’s regime and taken a lead in the crackdown against Hong Kong’s pro-democracy movement. Lai, a prominent member of that movement, now faces an even rockier road to a fair trial for his alleged crimes of conspiracy and collusion. As of now, the only crime he’s mitted is that of protesting on behalf of a free Hong Kong—but that’s been more than enough to stoke the ire of the Chinese Communist Party.

To secure Owen as counsel, Lai’s team would have to convince Lee that Owen’s involvement would not jeopardize Hong mitments to national security. With Lai’s trial approaching in September 2023, it’s ing increasingly difficult to see a path to victory for Hong Kong’s most effective voice for freedom. Although Lai’s team has battled doggedly to get to this moment, and Western voices continue to spread his story, there’s no question that securing Lai’s freedom—and a freer Hong Kong—remains an uphill battle.

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 premiered worldwide at on April 18, 2023. Stream it now.

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
A free-market agenda for rebuilding from the coronavirus
On June 18, 1940, British Prime Minister Winston Churchill steeled his people for the Battle of Britain with a stirring speech in the House of Commons that concluded: “Let us therefore brace ourselves to our duties, and so bear ourselves, that if the British Empire and its Commonwealth last for a thousand years, men will still say, ‘This was their finest hour.’” The present coronavirus crisis calls for Churchillian statesmanship, yet few, if any, democratically elected leaders have proven equal...
Science: Human beings were made for creative cooperation
Popular culture presents the human race petitors in a selfish struggle for the survival of the fittest. However, new scientific research finds that the human race has a natural tendency to cooperate—and that religion increases philanthropic giving and voluntarism during a crisis. “Humans are quite possibly the world’s best cooperators,” according to a summary by the Templeton World Charity Foundation, which sponsors research into the topic. “Cooperation has never been more relevant” than during the global pandemic of COVID-19. Scientists...
Rethinking free markets in an age of anxiety
On December 26, 1991, the USSR’s Supreme Soviet passed its final piece of legislation. Declaration Number 142-Н formally stated that the Soviet Union had ceased to exist as a sovereign entity. That vote sealed America’s victory in the Cold War. Many also believed that the twentieth century’s primary economic contest—socialism versus capitalism—was over. Across the world, even nations with long histories of dirigisme seemed to be embracing markets. All that seems like a long time ago. Today market skepticism is...
Alejandro Chafuen in Forbes: Latin America’s coronavirus situation
Last month Alejandro Chafuen, Acton’s Managing Director, International, published a piece on detailing Latin America’s response to and preparedness for COVID-19. He recently followed up with a new post that brings his analysis up to date and highlights the situation’s relationship to the rest of the Americas. The leaders of Brazil and Mexico remain targets of criticism, and it remains to be seen what effect, if any, changing seasons will have on the virus’s spread. The coronavirus has so far...
Acton Line podcast: Responding to a Harvard prof’s call to ban homeschooling
Homeschooling is growing in popularity. In fact, the U.S. Department of Education has shown that it’s grown at a rate of over 60% in the last decade, as many families are deciding that educating their children at home is better than sending them to public or private schools. But Harvard University has a different opinion. In Harvard Magazine’s May/June 2020 issue, one Harvard Law School professor calls for a ban on homeschooling, saying it may keep children from “contributing positively...
J.D. Vance and the politics of resentment
Resentment is plicated emotion, a curious mix of disappointment, disgust, anger, and fear. The villainous poser Antonio Salieri in Miloš Forman’s Academy Award-winning film Amadeus is a study in resentment. In his youth, Salieri, desired nothing more than to make music. Salieri admits Mozart was his idol and that “I can’t remember a time when I didn’t know his name!” He confesses he was always jealous of Mozart’s talent but still makes a successful career as poser in Vienna. When...
‘Mrs. America’: How Hollywood rewrites history
In an interview about her creation of FX’s new Hulu miniseries, Mrs. America, Dahvi Waller tells Esquire magazine that the idea for the series was born out of her childhood home. As the daughter of a political scientist, she “grew up learning about America’s politics and government” and developed a love for political dramas. Over time, however, she noticed that many political dramas revolved around men. “Women were either the wives or the victims,” she says. “I became really interested...
Acton Line podcast: COVID-19 and job loss: Where do we go from here?
The United States has been in a state of emergency since mid-March as a result of the COVID-19 outbreak. In order to slow the spread of the virus, states have implemented various measures, including shelter-in-place orders, forcing millions of Americans to stay at home. Millions of individuals have now been furloughed or laid off permanently, and many are struggling to put food on the table. The economy cannot remain closed indefinitely. How do we begin facing the tough questions evoked...
Acton Institute proclaims the failure of universal basic income to French speakers
The Acton Institute is helping popularize a left-leaning professor’s stark criticism of the universal basic e among the world’s 275-million Francophones. A new French language translation of “Marx vs. the universal basic e” recounts the findings of Ive Marx, a supporter of e redistribution. Despite his ideological inclinations, Marx ran the data and concluded that the UBI would actually harm the poor: Marx et une équipe de chercheurs ont testé les effets de l’introduction d’un revenu universel aux Pays-Bas. Leur...
Markets, populism and a fading American dream
The political divisions that started erupting across America in 2015 are about many things. These include the meaning of national sovereignty, the sense of a growing chasm between the political class and everyone else, and angst about what many believe to be unwarranted accelerations in wealth and e inequalities. Underlying such worries, however, is another belief: that opportunities for advancing one’s social and economic well-being are narrowing, even disappearing for many Americans. And if—if—that is the case, then part of...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved