From the New York Times, I'm Michael Bopara. This is the Daily.
The pro-democracy movement in Hong Kong brought hundreds of thousands of people out into the streets in 2019.
They demanded democracy, and that China uphold the freedoms it had promised when it took back the British colony in the late 1990s.
For the first time since Beijing imposed a new security law on Hong Kong, police have carried out dozens of arrests and used water cannon and tear gas against protesters.
China responded by arresting thousands of protesters, including the leaders of the movement, like a man named Jimmy Lai. For decades, Lai had used his wealth and his newspaper to campaign for democracy. He was a constant thorn in the side of Beijing.
If I knew that I would be in up like this in prison, would I have changed the way I run my life? And I realized that, no, I wouldn't.
We interviewed Lai on the show in 2020, just after he was arrested.
Because I never did anything before intentionally, just naturally. So it must be my character. Now, if it's my character, it's my destiny. It's my destiny. It's God's grace and blessing. So I was all relief.
He was later found guilty of national security crimes. And earlier this month, after five years of waiting behind bars, Jimmy Lai was summoned for his sentencing hearing. And when he arrived at the courthouse, what became clear is that the movement he once helped lead had now become a shell of itself. A small group of pro-democracy demonstrators had gathered outside, their faces hidden by scarves and masks for fear of being identified. They, like Lai himself, were waiting to learn his sentence.
The heavy, very heavy sentence, almost comically heavy sentence was expected.
20 years?
Yeah, 20 For his age, that's basically a life sentence.
Jimmy Lai's son, Sebastian, was also waiting.
I mean, by the time he gets out, if he does, he'll be 98. Given the health conditions that he's in and given the conditions that he's been kept in, I don't know if he could even serve on 10th of that sentence.
He spent years trying to free his father and learned the news of his sentence from thousands of miles away in Paris.
His health has deteriorated massively over the last five years. His nails are falling off. He's got heart problems. I mean, look, everybody knows someone around his age, late '70s, early '80s. And if you put a man of that age in a 60 square feet cell in solid confinement the whole time, even if you did that for someone for 100 days, the likelihood of that person surviving is not high, and he's been in there for 1,800 days and more.
Wow. You know that number very well.
Yeah. Yeah, unfortunately, I do. But there was a little moment that gave me some courage. It was when the sentence was announced and report from court said that he even managed to flash a smile, almost to tell his captors that he's still fighting, that even though they've shackled his body attempt to break it, they have not shackled his soul. And I think his spirit is only being made stronger by his persecution.
Today, we speak with Sebastian Lai about his father's sentence, what it means for the pro-democracy movement, and where Hong Kong goes from here. It's Friday, February 27th.
Have some coffee and breakfast.
That's it.
So five years ago, we, Sebastian, made an episode about your father around the time when he was first arrested. So many of the details from that episode stick out to me. He was born in mainland China and grew up in poverty during the Communist takeover there. There was widespread spread famine at that time.
I work as a boy.
And he recollected the story of working on the trains.
Those guys I carry the bag dish for.
Carrying the bags of rich people who were going to Hong Kong back and forth and how one man gave him a piece of chocolate.
What's this? It's a chocolate. I said, Where are you from? Hong Kong. I said, Hong Kong must be heaven.
That was extraordinary in his memory because this was a sweetness he had never known and a luxury he couldn't really even imagine that it prompted him eventually to flee to Hong Kong. He actually ends up hiding in a boat, traveling there. This was all before your time. But were these stories that you heard growing up?
Yeah. He also would tell me the story of when he first landed into Hong Kong, And he went to the market, and he had never seen so much food in his entire life. So he broke down crying. And he'd always say it's one of the best days of his life because in Hong Kong, even though he had nothing, he knew that at least he had freedom and that he had future. And I actually always heard these stories through a very happy lens. And it's only growing up that I realized how painful that period of his life would have been.
Well, when he goes from nothing to becoming a multimillionaire, he eventually He buys his own factory, he launches a clothing company, and eventually starts a very popular magazine, and then a newspaper, Apple Daily, when Hong Kong was still governed by Britain. To so many in Hong Kong and around the world, he becomes this pro-democracy champion. To others, including the Chinese government, he's something else. He's an agitator. He is a troublemaker. But to For you, he's your father. That's what we want to talk about here. What dad was Jimmy Lai?
I was born in 94.
Just before the handover?
Exactly. I was born three years before the I remember. I mean, all the memories that I have are very happy memories. I guess that's what memory does to you. But he was a very good father, and he was also a very colorful personality. I mean, he used to have a bear.
He used to have a bear.
He used to have a brown bear at home. So when he was doing Giordano- This is the clothing line he created before the newspapers. Exactly, clothing line. He would have truck drivers. And one day, one of his truck drivers got sold a bear. Well, he thought it was a dog. He thought it was a puppy. So he went to my father and just was like, Here, boss, this is a present for you. And my dad was like, What do you want me to do with it? And it was one of those moments where they We didn't want to call animal control, whatever it was to put it down. So dad kept the bear at home. And eventually, we got sent to a zoo and whatnot in Thailand. But for a period, yeah. Yeah, the bear.
That does suggest a certain adventurousness. Yeah. He pushes boundaries, right? Suddenly, you're living with a bear.
Yes. Well, he is. He's still a real rebel at heart.
What about Hong Kong itself? How did you experience your dad's relationship to the city?
I mean, a lot of his favorite places were restaurants. You'd always go to these wonderful Chinese places with the Dim Sams, with the steam fish. Very local, very almost traditional, but very simple dishes. And I think going back to the first day he arrived, he has this... And even back to the chocolate story, he has this relationship with food that was one of those things that gave him a lot of joy in life. I mean, not only was it absolutely delicious, but for me, it was that contrast.
What do you mean?
I think Obviously, people know how Hong Kong looks like. There are these massive manmade skyscrapers that threaten to touch the sky. And so you could have this massive metropolis, but still have these hole in the wall type of place. And as a kid, that's the moment where you see the Eastern influence of the place. Hong Kong is a city that's steeped in Chinese culture, but then also had Western values. Free press, freedom of expression. We had a very strong rule of law. It was one of the freest cities in that part of the world. Growing up, you very much realized that. In fact, I still remember when dad started his newspaper. And I remember going to the printing presses with him. And it was pretty incredible. You would hear the machines that were nonstop. And you go up railings to see the machines from up top. And I think I must have been eight or nine. So my dad took me by the hand, and then the other hand had touched the railings, and I still remember looking at my hand. I looked at it and my hand was black from the ink. And it was one of those moments where I knew what dad did for work.
I think it was one of those moments that made it very real for me.
Was journalism something that you wanted to do? Was owning a newspaper something that you wanted to do? This entire line of work that your dad is doing.
It wasn't something that I particularly wanted to do. I think part of the reason is because he was very free in terms of how he wanted us to live our lives.
So he freed you from that expectation to pursue what you wanted.
Yeah, exactly. He knew that this was his fight. Especially, there were occasions where he was followed, a house was firebombed, someone skinned a dog and pinned it on our door. Wow. And so Dan knew that this wasn't a fight. He would say himself that it wasn't necessarily a fight that he wanted to pass on to his kids because he knew the tremendous sacrifice. In fact, I think that's what is so remarkable talk a little bit about him. This idea of someone arriving as a stairway and becoming one of the most successful business people, and then saying that I'm going to sacrifice all that success, all of those opportunities, to stand up for what is right. And I still remember this moment. It's me, him and my mother. We're in London walking through Hyde Park, and it's a sunny day, and My father, he learned how to sing. To be completely honest, he didn't sing that well. But he liked to sing, and that's how you get better. And on this beautiful day in London, he's just singing in the park.
What was he singing?
He was singing Ave Maria.
Wow. Yeah. A difficult song for anyone.
Yes, that's very true. Thinking back on that day, just my father the sun shining on him, saying Averia at the top of his lungs. Even at that age, I think I was maybe 14, 15, a thought came to me that it's what personal freedom looks like. Here's a man who loves life, who loves so many different elements of life. And when he escaped China, that was what he escaped for. And it was a moment where I realized he had long achieved that. That he had the wealth, the status, the appreciation of someone that was free, of someone that was truly free. And had he stayed there, Had he stayed in London, he's a British citizen, he's got a British passport, he would have had personal freedom. But despite that, said that actually, I can't just be a person who lives for my own Pleasure.
You were starting to understand that even as it sounds like a teenager.
Yeah.
That your dad was a man who could have lived, if he chose to, in a state of constant indulgence. His whole life could have been essentially walking through a very beautiful park singing. Instead, he chose a very different life with a great deal more risk and struggle.
Yeah, I think he chose a life that... Instead of life that would have been outwardly beautiful, he chose one of inward beauty. One that has landed him in the Hong Kong Prison.
We'll be right back.
I'm curious if you anticipated at any point that the promises that China made about Hong Kong's freedoms. I wonder when you started to sense that those promises were not going to be kept.
For me, at least, it was 2014 during the umbrella protests.
These are pro-democracy.
Exactly, pro-democracy protest. I was a university student at that point, and dad used to go out every day and join the protest. He would stand up there with a microphone and give speeches and then tell people to stand up for this, do it peacefully and whatnot. He was always a man of peace. But he was tear-gashed. Someone even shot a canister at him. And then there was once where they threw pig innens on him. Wow. Then once the tear gas came, he'd wipe his face, and then go back up again and talk again.
As this is happening, are you out in the streets with your dad? Are you participating in those 2014 protests?
Yeah, I was out on the streets, but I wasn't with dad.
But you were protesting?
Yeah. Yeah. I was protesting. I mean, I was also hit with tear canisters as well. And I still remember I was with my girlfriend, my wife at that time, and I just told her, Look at this, just turn around and start walking, and then you feel a prickle at the back of your neck, and then you breathe in and all the tear gas. So I still remember that. I mean, nothing compared to what dad was doing, which he was literally on the front lines.
Was he encouraging you to get involved in the protests?
No. I don't think it was something that he needed encouraging. I think at that point, we realized that we're fighting for these freedoms for our home and for our kids and their kids. You felt like you were part of something that was bigger than yourself. Of course, after the 2014 protests, which died down for some period of time, by 2019, they are in full blossom once again.
People are out in the streets, and those protests end up centering around this now infamous national security law that starts to take freedoms away in a pretty formal way. I have to imagine that in the back of your head in that period, you're starting to wonder what all this means for your father. What was for you the first sign that Chinese authorities might be coming for your dad?
I think it was the brutality by some of the police officers and the crackdowns on a lot of the protests. The phrase I'll use is overzealous, I feel so.
Oh, my God.
Oh, my God. There was a social contract that was broken between the people of Hong Kong and the police at that point. Oh my God. This was new? Yeah, this was new. And then from there, obviously, the actual passing of the National Security Law. And obviously, many people were told that to leave at that point because everybody knew that he was one of the main targets.
That That law seemed to have his name written all over it.
That it was almost tailor-made for him, so to speak.
Did you ever try to persuade your dad to lay low, to perhaps stop what he was doing in this period?
Honestly, I've thought about that a lot, and I keep thinking about why I did not do it because even at that point, I knew that there was a possibility that I never see my father again if he stayed in Hong Kong. I also knew that there's a few opportunities in life where you're Where you're called, almost by your principles, to do the right thing. And obviously, everybody knows that leaving would have been a much more comfortable choice. But he knew that it was the wrong choice. And as a son, I could see that he knew that it was the wrong choice. He knew that he was a captain and that he needed to go down with the ship. And that by staying, he could almost act as a lightning for the prosecution to come.
Hong Kong police on Monday made the highest profile arrest yet under China's new national security law for the city. Media tycoons Jimmy Lai.
Hong Kong media tycoon Jimmy Lai has been arrested under Beijing's-And then what you feared happens.
He's arrested.
One of the most prominent democracy activists-Where were you when he was arrested?
I was on a business trip in Taiwan, and you remember, back in those days, it was quarantined. I was still in quarantine. Then someone knocks on my door at 5: 00 in the morning and tells me that dad had been arrested, that they sent dozens of national security police officers to our home to grab him and then walk him through his own office. Right.
A pretty elaborate power play, let's just be honest. They take him from his home where they arrested him to his office to say something to the world.
Yeah, to say something to the world and to all his journalists as well.
Yeah.
. I thought I was going to go back to Hong Kong, but they started arresting other people. I knew that it wasn't safe.
I mean, is it safe to assume that you understood that if you had returned, you yourself might be arrested?
Yeah, exactly.
Did any part of you think about going anyway? I know your father freed you from the obligations of being a freedom fighter, taking over his business. But did any part of you think, I should go back?
Yeah, of course. When I first heard that he was arrested, I wanted to do what I can to to free my father. It's heartbreaking.
I don't mean to be provocative, but I'm curious if not going back entails any feelings of guilt?
Actually, I think that that might be something that you have to ask me again in four or five years. I think some part of me obviously wants to see him more than anything. I haven't seen him in five years. I haven't been able to tell him in person how much I miss him, how proud I am of him. But what can I do from Hong Kong? I'll feel powerless to just see him through this glass screen and talk to him on a phone, if they even let me do that. At least by doing what I'm doing now, there's a chance with me seeing him again, seeing him again as a free man.
If the advocacy you're doing to try to get him out were to work.
Yeah, exactly.
Do you have any contact with your dad right now in prison?
I can't speak to him. I can't go back and see him, but I can still write him letters.
He sends you letters?
He sends me letters, and I send letters back.
Is there anything he said to you in a letter that you can share with us?
To be honest, we just talk about what's happening in my life, family, what he's doing at the moment, and A lot of it is reading, and a lot of it is drawing these religious drawings. He's a very strong Catholic, so he draws pictures of Christ, of Mother Maria. That's his way of being in touch with his faith. You can imagine if you're in the Solstice in climbing, it's just between you and God. It's very moving.
Do you know if he still sings?
That's a good question, actually. I don't know. I don't know.
I mean, are you wondering if there's really any chance you're ever going to see him again? Or does it feel to you like you really have lost your dad in all of this?
I've been campaigning on his behalf for the last few years When you do these things, you just have to be hopeful. But yeah, it's very distressing because I just don't know when it is that I'm going to get a text to tell me that something bad has happened to him. But until then, I'll keep fighting until he's freed.
What in your mind is the scenario in which he is freed? Is it Western leaders negotiating his release?
Yeah, it's to put pressure on both Hong Kong and China. The thing is, there's no upside for China to keep him in there anymore. If the idea of China is this place, as they would say themselves, of stability, of being a superpower, Well, torturing a 78-year-old man, it's counter to what they hope to achieve.
But you know this well, and I don't mean to diminish what is no doubt such an agonized It's a surprising situation for you. But what China accomplishes by doing what they're doing to your father is telling everyone in Hong Kong that protest is futile because look what we can do, look what we done to one of the richest and most powerful men in the city.
Yeah, I think that's what a lot of people think. But this idea of using my father's case as a deterrent, I mean, the effect has already been done, essentially. He's already been there for five years. They've already destroyed his health. They've already taken everything away from him. All they're doing now is making him into a martyr. There's no point in him dying. And I think if we look at my father's story, a man who's given so much for freedom, I think he deserves some freedom himself.
I want to ask you about Hong Kong itself. When you think about the situation your father is now in and may or may not ever emerge from. The pro-democracy movement as best we can tell is basically over, especially now that such an important leader of its cause is locked away. Is the vision of Hong Kong as a place that could have any form of freedom? Is that officially over?
Look, I can't predict the future, right? But I think one has to ask, what is the difference between Hong Kong and any other city in China? I mean, there's still some short term differences, but really in the long term, what is the fundamental difference? Many people would argue that there isn't.
There isn't any difference. Yeah. Hong Kong is China now. And does that mean that the Hong Kong that your father fought for It might be hard to hear these words, but it's gone.
I want to say I don't know. I think I think it's always in people's hearts. It's obviously a very sad thought. Maybe the Hong Kong that dad and many people fought for is now oppressed. But I hope it's not gone.
You know.
I I always thought I'd have a family in Hong Kong, get married there, see my grandma and my parents every now and then, and have a young child with the family on Sundays. But it's very easy to take it for granted. That Hong Kong was always going to be the way it was going to be. Well, at least it was very easy for me to take it for granted. It's like that office quote, the office TV show, where one of the characters says, I wish they'd tell you that you're living in the good times when you are living in the good time.
Do you have children Are you a children of your own now?
Yeah, I've got one.
How old?
She turned two recently, so she's never met my father before.
Does she know of him?
Yeah, she sees pictures of him and Yeye, his grandfather, in Portuguese, and she'll say, Yeah, like a point of pictures. It's very sweet.
Has your father addressed her in any of his letters?
Yeah, he's He's obviously incredibly happy. I mean, you know how grandparents are. He misses her without having ever met her.
That It must be really hard.
Yeah. But I'm sure she'll grow up knowing that she could be proud of her grandfather as well. Right.
Whether she gets to meet him or not.
Yeah.
And hopefully one day, she will get to meet him.
Yeah, hopefully. Hopefully one day, she will.
Yeah, that'd be a great day.
We'll be right back. Here's what else you need to know today. Netflix has backed away from its deal to acquire Warner Brothers Discovery, a stunning development that paves the way for the stor Hollywood media giant to end up under the control of the technology heir, David Ellison. Netflix said that for business reasons, it would not match Ellison's higher offer for Warner Brothers. That means that Ellison's company, Paramount Skydance, will soon own two major studios, plus CBS, HBO, and CNN. And. During a closed-door videotaped deposition on Thursday, Hillary Clinton, the former first lady, Democratic nominee for President and Secretary of State, scoulded the Republican-led committee investigating Jeffrey Epstein for compelling her to testify when she said she has never met Epstein and had no knowledge of his criminal activities. The hearing was briefly halted when a Republican committee member, Representative Lauren Boebert, leaked a photograph of Clinton's testimony to a conservative podcaster. House rules strictly prohibit taking photographs of closed-door hearings.
Today, we are sitting through an incredibly unserious clown show of a deposition where members of Congress and the Republican Party are more concerned about getting their photo op of Secretary Clinton than actually getting to the truth and holding anyone accountable.
Democrats on the committee, including Representative Yasmin Ansari, mocked the proceedings as a partisan political stunt that would do little to hold Epstein and his network of wealthy friends accountable. Today's episode was produced by Shannon Lynn Lindsay Garrison, and Rob Zipco, with help from Michael Simon Johnson. It was edited by Maria Byrne, with help from Lexie D. Al. Contains original music by Alishaba Itu, Dan Powell, and music by Roni Mesto, Marion Lozano, and Pat McCusker, and was engineered by Alyssa Moxley, with help from Chris Wood. Special thanks to David Pearson. It for The Daily. I'm Michael Maboro. See you on Sunday.
When pro-democracy protesters marched in the streets in Hong Kong in 2019, China responded by arresting thousands, including the leaders of the movement.
One of the arrested was Jimmy Lai, who had used his newspaper to campaign for democracy. This month, he received a 20-year jail sentence.
In an interview, Michael Barbaro speaks to Mr. Lai’s son, Sebastien Lai, about the sentence, what it means for the pro-democracy movement and where Hong Kong may go from here.
Guest: Sebastien Lai, a democracy activist and the son of the pro-democracy media entrepreneur Jimmy Lai.
Background reading:
A Hong Kong court sentenced Jimmy Lai to 20 years in prison.
The sentence for the media mogul shows how Hong Kong enforces Xi Jinping’s red lines with a new severity.
Listen to our interview with Jimmy Lai from 2020.
Photo: Andrew Testa for The New York Times
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