
Jimmy Lai trial postponed in Hong Kong due to severe weather
The city's weather observatory issued the highest-level rainstorm warning, leading to the cancellation of court hearings.
Lai, the 77-year-old founder of Apple Daily, faces charges of foreign collusion under Hong Kong's national security law.
The trial, which began in 2023, was set to enter its final stages with lawyers expected to present closing arguments.
Judicial authorities announced that postponed hearings would resume on Friday.
Lai has been detained since December 2020, with reports indicating he is held in solitary confinement.
Western governments and human rights organisations have repeatedly called for his release.
In addition to foreign collusion charges, Lai is accused of seditious publication linked to 161 opinion pieces.
During the trial, Lai testified for over 50 days, discussing his political views and overseas connections.
He twice referred to himself as a 'political prisoner,' drawing strong objections from the judges.
Hong Kong officials have defended the legal proceedings, stating the case is evidence-based.
Reporters Without Borders criticised Lai's treatment as part of a crackdown on press freedom.
Judges previously suggested a verdict could be delivered by October.
Thursday marked the fifth black rainstorm warning this year, surpassing previous records. - AFP

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Sun
4 minutes ago
- The Sun
Trump vows to help save Hong Kong democrat Jimmy Lai
WASHINGTON: U.S. President Donald Trump on Thursday said he would see what he could do to help 'save' detained Hong Kong media tycoon Jimmy Lai, even though Chinese President Xi Jinping would not be 'thrilled.' 'I'm going to do everything I can to save him,' Trump told Fox News Radio in an interview. 'We'll see what we can do ... we're going to do everything we can.' Lai, 77, has pleaded not guilty to charges under Hong Kong's national security law of conspiracy to collude with foreign forces, as well as to a separate charge of conspiracy to publish seditious material. He has been held in solitary confinement for more than 1,500 days since December 2020. Liu Pengyu, the spokesperson for China's embassy in Washington, said Lai had been 'a key orchestrator and participant in anti-China, destabilizing activities in Hong Kong.' 'We strongly oppose external forces using judicial cases as a pretext to interfere in China's internal affairs or to smear and undermine Hong Kong's rule of law,' he said. Trump has said he would raise Lai's case as part of negotiations with China over trade and tariffs. On Monday, the U.S. and China extended a tariff truce for another 90 days, staving off triple-digit duties on each other's goods. On Tuesday, U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said trade officials from the two sides will meet again within the next two or three months to discuss the future of the economic relationship. - Reuters


The Star
14 minutes ago
- The Star
Boom for the rich, bust for the rest
A man sleeping on the floor of a subway station in Buenos Aires. Inflation has cooled and luxury sales are soaring, but nine out of 10 Argentinian households are in debt. — AFP IN Javier Milei's Argentina, falling inflation has stimulated a boom in car and real estate sales and foreign-bound planes take off laden with tourists. But on the other side of a very complicated economic coin, consumption is dropping precipitously among low- and middle-income groups while more and more people work in precarious jobs and buy groceries on credit. Milei, who took office as president in December 2023, has partly succeeded in his quest to curb state spending and runaway inflation, which reached a five-year monthly low in May. But the price has been a devalued peso and deep cuts to state subsidies that made access to housing, healthcare and education prohibitively expensive for millions. Consumer spending dipped heavily last year and a tentative rebound has been unequal: spending on tangible assets such as apartments and cars has skyrocketed among the rich, while ever more poorer people can not afford shoes or food. Nine out of 10 Argentine households are in debt, official data shows. Even more have defaulted on a loan. 'Nothing is selling,' shoe store employee Laura Comiso said in downtown Buenos Aires after yet another afternoon without customers. But in San Andres de Giles west of the capital, car salesman Blas Morales waxed lyrical about 'an excellent June!' According to Sebastian Beato, president of Argentina's Acara car dealership association, the first half of 2025 was 'the best in seven years' with sales up nearly 80% from 2024. Under Milei's measures, loans have become cheaper, and Argentines have been encouraged by a tax amnesty to bring out billions of US dollars they had stashed under mattresses and floorboards, in safety deposit boxes and offshore accounts. Investment in real estate increased 22% year-on-year in Buenos Aires in May. In the first four months of 2025, more mortgages were taken out in Argentina than in all of 2024. 'The change in government has been very positive for this sector,' said third-generation real estate agent Diego Sardano. 'Under the previous government, we went months without making a single sale. Now we have about five sales per month,' he added. A stronger peso also benefits those travelling abroad but harms domestic tourism, with bookings plummeting. Between January and April, about six million Argentines travelled abroad – 70% more than in the same period in 2024. The country received only two million visitors at the same time, the lowest figure in a decade. Consumption is being driven largely by Argentina's upper class, which comprises no more than 6% of the population. Consulting firm Moiguer said in a recent report the economic recovery after months of recession was not benefiting everyone equally, and was exacerbating income inequality. Half of Argentines tell pollsters they cannot make ends meet, and a third delay planned purchases in order to pay for essentials. Sardano, the realtor, said he feared spending on homes and apartment may have peaked 'because people's purchasing power isn't increasing'. 'High-end car registrations are increasing while food consumption is falling. The middle class is being wiped out,' added Rodolfo Aguilar, head of the State Workers' Union (ATE) which has reported 40,000 job losses among its ranks under Milei. Fernando Savore, head of the Federation of Small Businesses in Buenos Aires province, said having a job no longer guarantees financial stability because wages have not kept pace with rising gas, electricity and transport prices, or school fees. 'Much of a worker's income goes toward these obligations. There are items that no longer sell, like candy and desserts,' he said. 'People only buy necessities like pasta and tomato puree, nothing more, and many are buying on credit.' — AFP


The Star
2 hours ago
- The Star
Tropical storm disrupts travel, courts and schools
Stormy setback: People using umbrellas and raincoats to protect themselves from the rain in Hong Kong, after Podul weakened to a severe tropical storm. — AFP TROPICAL storm Podul dumped torrential rain on southern China, still reeling from record downpours last week, and disrupted hospitals, schools and law courts in Hong Kong after tearing through Taiwan and leaving 143 people injured. The hearing of Hong Kong media tycoon and pro-democracy advocate Jimmy Lai was cancelled yesterday after authorities put in place their highest-level 'black' rainstorm warning. Outpatient clinics also shut until evening, and schools closed for the day. Airports across the region reported cancellation rates for the morning of around 20%, according to data from Flightmaster, as Podul pelted parts of Guangdong, Hunan and Jiangxi provinces with more than 70mm of rain an hour. Over a third of flights to Quanzhou – a key textile, footwear and apparel export hub – were cancelled, with analysts warning that extreme weather events increasingly pose a threat to growth in the world's second-largest economy. China has been battling with record rainfall in its north and south as well as prolonged heatwaves in its interior. Yesterday, the government announced 430 million yuan (RM252mil) in fresh funding for disaster relief, taking the total allocated since April to at least 5.8 billion yuan (RM3.4bil). Podul made landfall on the coast of China's southeastern province of Fujian, having weakened from a typhoon to a tropical storm after lashing Taiwan on Wednesday, where winds of up to 191kph left one person missing and scores injured. But its residual vortex stands to wreak havoc in southern China, still reeling from the heaviest rains in generations last week, as it moves northwest at a speed of 30-35kph. Hong Kong saw its heaviest August rainfall since 1884 last week while in Guangdong, 75,000 people were evacuated as 622.6mm of rain fell on the provincial capital Guangzhou between Aug 2 and 6 – nearly three times the city's August average – leaving at least seven dead. 'Authorities need to be extra ready,' said Chim Lee, a senior analyst at the Economist Intelligence Unit. 'There's growing evidence that we're seeing more intense and slower-moving tropical cyclones. 'China's southern coast is set for economic disruptions of all kinds. Most institutions in the region are fairly well prepared, but there also seems to be a subtle northward shift in where cyclones reach their peak intensity – these places need to keep a sharper eye out.' Over one million cubic meters of water, the equivalent of 400 Olympic-sized swimming pools, was discharged from a reservoir in eastern Guangdong on Wednesday to free up space in anticipation of further heavy rain, state media reported. Authorities in Guangdong's Meizhou closed all the highways yesterday morning due to the downpour, and the high-speed railway linking the high-tech hubs of Shenzhen and Hangzhou in eastern Zhejiang province was suspended. — Reuters