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Hong Kong’s Jimmy Lai claims ‘no knowledge’ of advocacy group he lent money to

Former tycoon also says he didn’t know ‘Stand With Hong Kong’ hashtag in his Twitter posts were similar to name of protest group that called for sanctions

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Former media boss Jimmy Lai, founder of the now-defunct Apple Daily tabloid, during an interview in May 2020. Photo: Reuters
Former Hong Kong media boss Jimmy Lai Chee-ying returned to the witness box on Wednesday for his fifth day of oral testimony as the court continued to examine evidence regarding his national security charges at West Kowloon Court.
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Lai, 77, had denied two charges of conspiring to collude with foreign forces under the 2020 national security law, as well as a third count of conspiracy to print and distribute seditious publications in breach of colonial-era legislation.

The founder of the now-defunct Apple Daily tabloid previously denied prosecutors’ allegations that he had attempted to influence foreign policies on Hong Kong or mainland China through his relationships with politicians and activists in the United States, Britain and Taiwan.

He also denied allegations that he had pressured former top aides at the newspaper to create a sanctions list for Washington after the national security law was implemented in Hong Kong.

On Monday, the fourth day of Lai’s oral testimony, his lawyers turned their attention to Apple Daily’s online English-language edition.

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He said he wanted the newspaper to attract overseas readers by publishing “negative” articles in English about the mainland, but denied he had intended to trigger Western sanctions.

He added that he felt a newspaper’s credibility was not built upon balanced coverage, but on reporting what it perceived to be the truth.

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