Hong Kong court rejects challenge by jailed media tycoon Jimmy Lai over British lawyer
Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox
Hong Kong media tycoon Jimmy Lai's trial is scheduled to begin in September.
PHOTO: REUTERS
Follow topic:
HONG KONG - A Hong Kong court on Friday dismissed an attempt by jailed media tycoon Jimmy Lai to challenge a decision by security officials to effectively bar his British lawyer from representing him in a landmark national security trial.
Lai’s legal team filed a judicial review after Hong Kong’s National Security Committee (NSC), headed by senior Hong Kong and Chinese officials, ruled that the admission of senior British barrister Timothy Owen could harm national security and advised the city’s authorities to reject his visa.
The use of foreign lawyers by both the prosecution and the defence has long been allowed in the former British colony as part of its rule of law traditions.
The rejection of Lai’s legal challenge comes after the Hong Kong legislature on May 10 passed a Bill giving the city’s leader the discretionary power to bar foreign lawyers from national security cases,
Chief High Court Judge Jeremy Poon, in dismissing Lai’s challenge, said Hong Kong courts essentially had no authority over the NSC.
Under Hong Kong’s national security law, the law “has not vested the… courts with any jurisdiction over the work of the NSC”, the judge wrote in a judgment.
“The duties and functions of the NSC… are matters well beyond the… courts’ institutional capacity,” Judge Poon said.
A lawyer for Lai, Mr Robert Pang, had earlier argued that if the court could not step in when the NSC overstepped its power, Hong Kong was “saying goodbye to a huge chunk of our rule of law”.
“You cannot have a body which can simply say magic words (on) national security, and be able to be free from any challenge,” Mr Pang said.
Beijing imposed the national security law on Hong Kong
The 75-year-old Lai founded the pro-democracy Apple Daily newspaper that was raided by police and shut down in 2021.
He was jailed for five years and nine months last December
Lai has pledged to plead not guilty. His trial is scheduled to begin in September.
More than 100 global media leaders signed a statement calling for Lai’s release in May. They included Nobel Prize laureates Dmitry Muratov and Maria Ressa, as well as the editors of The New York Times, The Washington Post and The Guardian. REUTERS

