The harrowing imprisonment of Jimmy Lai, a 78 year old British citizen and founder of the pro democracy newspaper Apple Daily in Hong Kong, exposes a stunning moral abdication by the United Kingdom.
Lai has spent over five years in detention, much of it in solitary confinement, under draconian applications of Hong Kong’s National Security Law. His treatment — harsh conditions, deteriorating health, denial of adequate medical care, and the systematic erosion of fair trial protections — has been widely condemned as a gross violation of his fundamental rights.
This is not an abstract issue. It is the clear dismantling of press freedom, the rule of law, and the protections that were supposed to bind the One Country, Two Systems promise. Lai’s prosecution — on charges that critics call politically motivated and rooted in his journalistic work — symbolizes the broader crackdown on dissent in Hong Kong. n
Yet the British government’s response has been tepid. Citizenship should mean unconditional defense of our people’s rights and dignity. Allowing a British national to languish under cruel, punitive conditions — without sustained, decisive diplomatic pressure — is not only shameful, it undermines the very values Britain claims to uphold.
The UK must demand immediate consular access, call for Jimmy Lai’s release, and make his freedom a precondition for any meaningful engagement with Beijing. Anything less is betrayal — of a citizen, of our international obligations, and of the ideals we profess to champion.