Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Jimmy Lai ranked No. 1 on press freedom coalition’s “10 Most Urgent” list
Jimmy Lai ranked No. 1 on press freedom coalition’s “10 Most Urgent” list
Mar 15, 2026 8:44 PM

Imprisoned entrepreneur, publisher, and pro-democracy activist Jimmy Lai has been highlighted as the most urgent case when es to threats to press freedom in China, this as the world is about to focus on Beijing for the 2022 Winter Olympics.

Read More…

Every month, the One Free Press Coalition issues its “10 Most Urgent” list, ranking the most harrowing challenges to press freedom from around the world in order of urgency. Jimmy Lai, a 74-year-old Hong Kong entrepreneur and pro-democracy activist currently serving a 20-month prison sentence on national security charges, topped this month’s list, as the coalition focused on press freedom in China in light of the ing 2022 Winter Olympics.

The prises international groups of professional editors and publishers “standing up for journalists under attack for pursuing the truth.”

“Media outlets worldwide unite as the One Free Press Coalition to publish this list and draw attention to the most pressing cases of threats against journalists,” the coalition said.

Lai has continually confronted Hong Kong’s National Security Law (NSL), the city’s wide-sweeping effort to silence voices of political opposition in imitation of Communist China. Since the NSL’s implementation in June 2020, Hong Kong has slid further into Beijing-like tendencies: Journalists have been arrested without reason, and individuals and organizations have been censored as “subversives.” In general, Hong Kong citizens’ freedoms of speech, press, assembly, and association have been stifled, with Lai’s case in ing under the coalition’s spotlight.

When es to arresting journalists, China was ranked the worst—50th out 50—for the third year in a row, reports the Committee to Protect Journalists’ 2021 prison census. There are a some 50 journalists behind bars in China, according to the census.

In April 2021, Lai was convicted of unlawful assembly in Hong Kong’s 2019 pro-democracy protests; this event, some argue, was the catalyst for a stricter implementation of the NSL. Later that year, on Dec. 11, after his newspaper, Apple Daily, and pany, Next Digital, were forcibly shuttered by Hong Kong authorities, Lai was handed another conviction, for his role in a vigil that marked the Tiananmen Square Massacre, and was sentenced to an additional 13 months in prison.

Most recently, on Jan. 4, Lai was accused of conspiracy to print, publish, sell, and distribute “seditious publications” between April 2019 and Apple Daily’s last day in business, June 24, 2021.

This is not the first time Lai, one of the most notable journalists in Hong Kong, especially for his criticisms of Beijing and its anti-democratic policies, has been recognized by international organizations.

Most often, Lai’s recognition has been in the form of an award, typically from civil society mending his efforts in upholding authentic journalism in the face of strict government censorship and control. For example, at the conclusion of 2021, Lai and his staff at Apple Daily were the winners of the World Association of News Publishers “Golden Pen Freedom Award.”

The One Free Press Coalition’s ranking marks the first time, however, that Lai’s struggle against Hong Kong’s increasingly tyrannical government has been in the form of a sheer negative calculation, in which he places first. Thus Lai’s case is portrayed by the coalition as an immediate call to action in the fight for press freedom for journalists in Hong Kong.

In addition to Lai at the number one spot, there are nine other journalists on the One Free Press Coalition’s “10 Most Urgent” list, each with his or her own heroic story in defending press freedom in their home countries. More information on the journalists can be found here.

And stay tuned for the Acton Institute’s documentary on the extraordinary life and pro-democracy struggles of Jimmy Lai, The Hong Konger, set to be released in early February.

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
To counter social ills…
The separation of church and state–that slippery topic–was dealt with recently with simplicity by the Holy Father. In speaking to the US Ambassador to the Vatican regarding ethics in politics, he said: “The disturbing spread of social disorder, war, injustice and violence in our world can ultimately be countered only by renewed appreciation and respect for the universal moral law whose principles derive from the Creator himself.” For the state to counter social ills, it must understand that societal problems...
It’s called tithing
The church thought of this first, but better late than never, I suppose: 10 over 100 is an effort to encourage people who make over $100,000 per year to donate 10% to charity. Here’s the pledge: I, [type your name here] , hereby make a personal promise to give 10% of whatever I make over $100,000 each year to charity. I will donate money directly to organizations of MY choosing, including charities, relief funds, schools, churches, etc. I understand that...
A revival of Christian democracy in Europe?
Well, maybe not exactly. But apparently not every European nation has decided to turn its back on Christianity. The EUObserver reports that Slovaks are voting this week on their national euro coin design – and some notably Christian images are leading. (Click here to see the images.) It’s quite noteworthy that the Christian images are popular rather than dictated by the government. Not surprisingly, many Poles are pushing for the image of Pope John Paul II on their euro. Now...
Prayer for the persecuted church
ing Sunday, November 13, is the International Day of Prayer for the Persecuted Church. The effort is billed as “a global day of intercession for persecuted Christians worldwide. Its primary focus is the work of intercessory prayer and citizen action on behalf of munities of the Christian faith. We also encourage prayer for the souls of the oppressors, the nations that promote persecution, and those who ignore it.” This effort is meant to embody the model of suffering given by...
Yes, ICANN (no, you can’t)
The AP reports that a deal has been struck to continue primary management of the Internet by the United States, following weeks and months of controversy. The EU had been pushing for control of the web to be turned over to a supra-national body, such as the UN. The accord was plished at The World Summit on the Information Society, an international gathering to examine the “digital divide” between developed and developing nations. While “the summit was originally conceived to...
‘Call on Charles Darwin’
By now most everyone has heard about Pat Robertson’s warning to a Pennsylvania town that voted out their school board. The move seemed to be in response to the board’s attempt to introduce curriculum including “intelligent design” theory. In an announcement to the people of Dover, PA, Robertson said: “if there is a disaster in your area, don’t turn to God — you just rejected Him from your city.” Robertson advised the city’s residents to seek assistance from someone other...
Why not fair-trade beer and cakes?
Economist John Larrivee looks at the logic underlying the fair trade coffee movement and applies it to beer and baked goods. It doesn’t quite make sense. Larrivee points out that “the question is not the difference between what different parties to the production get paid, but rather who adds value, how much, and where.” Read the mentary here. ...
Physician, whom dost thou serve?
An interesting piece in the new New Atlantis, The Moral Education of Doctors. …the transformation of doctoring in the image of science may also obscure, in important ways, the real character of the medical vocation. If we educate doctors solely or largely as mechanics of the body, we may leave them unprepared for the human encounter with the sick and desperate, the brave and dying, the healed and grateful. The point in a nutshell (with apologies to the author): there...
18, clumsy, and shy, I went to Hillsdale and I…
God Bless America. 18-year-old Michael Sessions was elected mayor of Hillsdale, MI, on Tuesday in a write-in campaign. Aside from having a great addition to his college applications (Float Committee; Football; Honor Society; Mayor), Sessions has shown not only what the power of initiative can achieve in a free society, but the importance of individual involvement in politics, involvement that helps keep that society free. ...
‘I could not do in Europe what I did in America.’
Those were the words of a German-born businessman in New York, quoted in today’s Wall Street Journal op-ed by Daniel Henninger. This lucky German continues: “A European at the age of 25, with little money but a lot of ambition and ideas, could not expect to move outside his own country–move to say the center of France, or the center of Italy, Belgium or any other country–and have much prospect of succeeding. He would remain an outsider.” In the wake...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved