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Reaction to Hong Kong tycoon Jimmy Lai’s 20-year sentence in security trial

By Thomson Reuters Feb 8, 2026 | 9:02 PM

Feb 9 (Reuters) – Hong Kong media tycoon Jimmy Lai was sentenced on Monday to 20 years in jail on two counts of conspiracy to collude with foreign forces and one of publishing seditious materials.

This is the reaction to the sentence:

RICK SCOTT, U.S. REPUBLICAN SENATOR:

“Tonight, my friend Jimmy Lai was unjustly sentenced by Communist China to 20 years in ‍prison for the ‘crime’ of daring to think differently from the CCP and refusing to use his newspaper to spread CCP propaganda.

“We will not forget what Xi and his thugs have done to Jimmy and so many political prisoners. ENOUGH IS ENOUGH! The world is watching, and we know the truth: Jimmy Lai is innocent, and he should be home with his family tonight, not in the hands of Xi’s thuggish regime.”

SEBASTIEN LAI, JIMMY LAI’S SON:

“Sentencing my father to this draconian prison sentence is devastating for our family and life-threatening for my father. It signifies the total destruction of the Hong ‌Kong legal system and the end of justice. After more than five years of relentlessly persecuting my ‌father, it is time for China to do the right thing and release him before it is too late.”

URANIA CHIU, LECTURER IN LAW AT OXFORD BROOKES UNIVERSITY:

“The application of collusion charges to certain journalistic activities is particularly alarming, because any engagement with international platforms and audiences may now easily be construed as such ‘collusion’.”

TAIWAN’S CHINA POLICY-MAKING MAINLAND AFFAIRS COUNCIL:

“Taiwan’s people should take Hong Kong’s painful experience as a lesson and safeguard the ​hard-won freedoms of daily life.”

STEVE LI, CHIEF SUPERINTENDENT OF THE HONG KONG POLICE NATIONAL SECURITY DEPARTMENT:

“Regarding the discussion about whether Jimmy Lai will spend the rest of his life in prison, I believe that no one can tell right now, only heaven knows. But ‍I would like to say that the sentence he received, he deserves it very ​much.”

JODIE GINSBERG, CEO, COMMITTEE TO PROTECT JOURNALISM:

“The rule of law has been completely shattered in Hong Kong. ​Today’s egregious decision is the final nail in the coffin for freedom of the press in Hong Kong. The international community must step ‍up its pressure to free Jimmy Lai if we want press freedom to be respected anywhere in the world.”

CHIU MEI-YING, 71, LAI SUPPORTER:

“My feelings are very unsettled. I hope he can receive a lighter sentence … Of course, the impact on Hong Kong is huge. Look – there’s no news left in Hong Kong now. Even the only outlet, Apple Daily, was taken away. Now there’s no news to read. So I don’t follow the news anymore; I watch YouTube, and news on different online platforms instead.”

CAOILFHIONN GALLAGHER, LEAD COUNSEL ON ‍LAI’S INTERNATIONAL LEGAL TEAM

“Today marks the final blow to the rule of law in Hong Kong. Sentencing Jimmy Lai – already aged 78 – to two decades behind bars is an affront to justice, and the culmination of over five years of malicious lawfare against a courageous, elderly ‍British citizen and prisoner of conscience. Now that ‍this sham trial is finally over, we call on leaders from around the world to speak ​with one voice in their demand for China to free Jimmy Lai.”

ELAINE PEARSON, ASIA DIRECTOR, HUMAN ​RIGHTS WATCH:

“The harsh ⁠20-year sentence against 78-year-old Jimmy Lai is effectively a death sentence. A sentence of this ‌magnitude is both cruel and profoundly unjust. Lai’s years of persecution show the Chinese government’s determination to crush independent journalism and silence anyone who dares to criticise the Communist Party.”

A FORMER APPLE DAILY REPORTER SURNAMED WONG:

“Now that ‘red lines’ have formally become part of the judgements and sentences, the news industry – already severely weakened – will shrink even further. If the sentences are used to set the boundaries at the maximum level, it won’t just add insult to injury for press freedom; it will be an avalanche.”

(Reporting by Jessie Pang, James Pomfret and Farah Master; Comprised by Anne Marie Roantree; Editing ⁠by Michael Perry and Christian Schmollinger)