HONG KONG — To his supporters, former Hong Kong media mogul Jimmy Lai is a fighter for democracy. To the government, he is a traitor to his motherland.
The 78-year-old outspoken critic of China's ruling Communist Party was sentenced Monday to 20 years in prison for conspiring to commit sedition and collude with foreign forces.
Observers say his trial came to symbolize a crackdown that began in 2020 on press and other freedoms that has changed Hong Kong, the former British colony that returned to China's control in 1997.
The Hong Kong government insists Lai's case has nothing to do with press freedom, but instead is an example of righteousness upheld by the law.
A migrant from mainland China, he made a fortune in the garment industry in Hong Kong and later founded the Apple Daily newspaper, where he wrote articles criticizing the Chinese and Hong Kong governments for limiting freedoms. The publication eventually was shuttered and his words became trial evidence.
Here is what to know about his unusual journey to political activism that has ended, at least for the moment, in prison.
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Lai was born in 1947 in the southern Chinese city of Guangzhou, once known as Canton, two years before the communists came to power.