The government issued a strong rebuttal in the early hours of Friday, dismissing London’s comments as “misleading and irresponsible” after the UK expressed concerns over Hong Kong’s erosion of human rights in its latest six-monthly report on the implementation of the Sino-British Joint Declaration signed in 1984.
“The government strongly urges the UK again to discern facts from fallacies, respect international law and basic norms governing international relations, and immediately stop interfering in Hong Kong matters, which are purely China’s internal affairs,” a spokesman said in a statement.
The report highlighted the conviction of Lai, the founder of the now-defunct Apple Daily, describing his trial and 20-year jail sentence as a “politically motivated prosecution”. It also flagged the authorities’ issuance of a new round of bounties targeting Hong Kong pro-democracy activists overseas.
Yvette Cooper, the UK’s secretary of state for foreign, commonwealth and development affairs, said London had expanded the British National (Overseas) immigration pathway after Lai’s sentencing to “reaffirm” the country’s commitment to Hongkongers, adding that Prime Minister Keir Starmer had raised the issue directly with Chinese President Xi Jinping in January.
“We will continue to use every opportunity to press China to release Mr Lai,” Cooper wrote.