-
Back to black: Philips posts first annual profit since 2021
-
South Korea police raid spy agency over drone flight into North
-
'Good sense' hailed as blockbuster Pakistan-India match to go ahead
-
Man arrested in Thailand for smuggling rhino horn inside meat
-
Man City eye Premier League title twist as pressure mounts on Frank and Howe
-
South Korea police raid spy agency over drone flights into North
-
Solar, wind capacity growth slowed last year, analysis shows
-
'Family and intimacy under pressure' at Berlin film festival
-
Basket-brawl as five ejected in Pistons-Hornets clash
-
January was fifth hottest on record despite cold snap: EU monitor
-
Asian markets extend gains as Tokyo enjoys another record day
-
Warming climate threatens Greenland's ancestral way of life
-
Japan election results confirm super-majority for Takaichi's party
-
Unions rip American Airlines CEO on performance
-
New York seeks rights for beloved but illegal 'bodega cats'
-
Blades of fury: Japan protests over 'rough' Olympic podium
-
Zelensky defends Ukrainian athlete's helmet at Games after IOC ban
-
Jury told that Meta, Google 'engineered addiction' at landmark US trial
-
Despite Trump, Bad Bunny reflects importance of Latinos in US politics
-
Australian PM 'devastated' by violence at rally against Israel president's visit
-
Vonn says suffered complex leg break in Olympics crash, has 'no regrets'
-
YouTube star MrBeast buys youth-focused banking app
-
French take surprise led over Americans in Olympic ice dancing
-
Lindsey Vonn says has 'complex tibia fracture' from Olympics crash
-
US news anchor says 'hour of desperation' in search for missing mother
-
Malen double lifts Roma level with Juventus
-
'Schitt's Creek' star Catherine O'Hara died of blood clot in lung: death certificate
-
'Best day of my life': Raimund soars to German Olympic ski jump gold
-
US Justice Dept opens unredacted Epstein files to lawmakers
-
Epstein taints European governments and royalty, US corporate elite
-
Three missing employees of Canadian miner found dead in Mexico
-
Meta, Google face jury in landmark US addiction trial
-
Winter Olympics organisers investigate reports of damaged medals
-
Venezuela opposition figure freed, then rearrested after calling for elections
-
Japan's Murase clinches Olympic big air gold as Gasser is toppled
-
US athletes using Winter Olympics to express Trump criticism
-
Japan's Murase clinches Olympic big air gold
-
Pakistan to play India at T20 World Cup after boycott called off
-
Emergency measures hobble Cuba as fuel supplies dwindle under US pressure
-
UK king voices 'concern' as police probe ex-prince Andrew over Epstein
-
Spanish NGO says govt flouting own Franco memory law
-
What next for Vonn after painful end to Olympic dream?
-
Main trial begins in landmark US addiction case against Meta, YouTube
-
South Africa open T20 World Cup campaign with Canada thrashing
-
Epstein accomplice Maxwell seeks Trump clemency before testimony
-
Discord adopts facial recognition in child safety crackdown
-
Some striking NY nurses reach deal with employers
-
Emergency measures kick in as Cuban fuel supplies dwindle under US pressure
-
EU chief backs Made-in-Europe push for 'strategic' sectors
-
Machado ally 'kidnapped' after calling for Venezuela elections
Death of Hong Kong's Lai would strengthen democracy message, son says
Locked up for more than four years and ailing, Hong Kong's pro-democracy media mogul Jimmy Lai would only become a greater symbol if he died in prison, his son said.
On a visit to Washington, Sebastien Lai was meeting US officials and lawmakers as he appealed for greater international pressure on China and Hong Kong's pro-Beijing authorities to free his father.
"It's horrible for me to say this, but if my father dies in prison, he's actually a stronger symbol of freedom, of martyrdom for your beliefs," Lai told AFP in an interview Monday.
He said that freeing his father would be in Beijing's own interest.
"As you've seen with a lot of dissidents, once they're released, they lose a lot of that, quote-unquote, power," he said.
"He's already been there for five years. He's served whatever sham sentence you brought against him."
Lai, 77, founded the Apple Daily, a popular pro-democracy tabloid that was shuttered as China clamped down on the metropolis, despite promises of a separate system when Britain handed it over in 1997.
A successful businessman and outspoken opponent of Beijing, Lai was arrested in late 2020 and has been behind bars since, with a judge last month saying only that his verdict would come "in good time."
The charges against him could carry between 15 years and life in prison.
His health has significantly worsened as he is diabetic, receives limited medical care and has been kept in solitary confinement without air-conditioning in the sweltering Hong Kong heat, his son said.
The younger Lai said the last he heard about his father was that he experienced heart palpitations, an episode earlier described by his defense lawyers.
- 'Very real consequences' -
China imposed a draconian security law in Hong Kong in 2020 after massive and at times destructive protests against Beijing swept the global financial hub.
Sebastien Lai said that other countries should persuade China that if they "go through with this and kill him, essentially, there will be very real consequences" for Hong Kong.
"Hong Kong is based on a strong, rigid legal system. That's why it's a financial center. Without the strong, rigid legal system, it's nothing," he said.
Jimmy Lai visited Washington in 2019 to discuss pro-democracy protests with leaders including then-vice president Mike Pence.
Prosecutors later pointed to his meetings, calling them a conspiracy to collude with foreign forces to impose sanctions on China and Hong Kong.
Trump, in an interview while on the campaign trail last year, said of Lai, "100 percent, I'll get him out."
Since returning to the White House, Trump has said he will at least try to free Lai. But Trump, long a harsh critic of China, has recently also spoken fondly of his relationship with President Xi Jinping.
The younger Lai voiced appreciation for Trump's efforts but voiced hope for a more outspoken stance by other Western countries, naming France.
He praised the stances of Germany as well as Britain, where Jimmy Lai holds nationality and where the younger Lai lives.
Sebastien Lai said Britain understood the importance of defending a person who sacrificed himself for democracy.
"It doesn't really get much better than that if you're going to give someone citizenship."
J.Pereira--PC