
Hong Kong national security law: 6 former Apple Daily executives face possible life sentences after trial moves to High Court
- The six senior executives of the now-defunct newspaper are charged under the national security law with colluding with foreign forces
- Prosecutors plan to move the trial to the Court of First Instance, where judges are not restricted by sentencing caps
The defendants appeared at West Kowloon Court on Thursday for a third pretrial hearing over the charge of colluding with foreign forces, three months after the tabloid-style newspaper published its last edition amid a national security law crackdown.
The former senior executives are editor-in-chief Ryan Law Wai-kwong, publisher Cheung Kim-hung, executive editor-in-chief Lam Man-chung, associate publisher Chan Pui-man, and editorial writers Fung Wai-kong and Yeung Ching-kee. No sentencing cap applies at the Court of First Instance, which is part of the High Court.

The prosecution did not reveal whether the trial would be heard before a jury. West Kowloon Court will handle the transfer procedure on October 12, with the six remaining in custody.
The police force’s National Security Department previously accused the six of conspiring with now-jailed Apple Daily founder Jimmy Lai Chee-ying to seek international sanctions or hostile actions by foreign governments against Hong Kong or mainland China.
Conspiracy to collude with foreign forces is punishable by life imprisonment, with a minimum jail term of 10 years applicable in serious cases.
The joint charge also targets three affiliated companies – Apple Daily Limited, Apple Daily Printing Limited and AD Internet Limited – which face a compulsory shutdown and fine if convicted.
But the court heard on Thursday that the law firm representing the three companies in previous proceedings had not received further instructions to act on their behalf.
Prosecutor Andy Lo Tin-wai said police would check whether the companies had knowingly ignored the proceedings. Acting chief magistrate Peter Law Tak-chuen said he would ask the court’s first clerk to notify the three companies of the next hearing date.
A trial can be conducted in a defendant’s absence only in rare and exceptional cases, for instance, where the party has deliberately and voluntarily waived the right to be present and to be legally represented.
Separately, the former vice-chairwoman of the group behind Hong Kong’s annual candlelight vigil to commemorate the 1989 Tiananmen Square crackdown lost her bail application for a fourth time on Thursday.
Barrister Chow Hang-tung was charged on September 10 with inciting subversion and failing to provide information to national security officers about the Hong Kong Alliance in Support of Patriotic Democratic Movements of China.
Chow renewed her bail bid before Law, but the magistrate found no material change of circumstances that would justify her release. She can reapply on October 8.
