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FORMER CIA CHIEF MIKE POMPEO had just seen his boss, US President Donald Trump, hit Hong Kong hard by signing an order cancelling its special trading status.
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But Pompeo's associate in the city, a publisher named Jimmy Lai, was making confusing statements, so he decided someone should check in with him. Pompeo's chief assistant Mary Kissel got in touch Lai through his right hand man, former US intelligence officer Mark Simon, a court heard.
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Kissel had known Lai and Mark Simon for more than ten years, having lived in Hong Kong in a previous job as a Wall St Journal reporter.
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HITTING HONG KONG
[Context: The US was making a long series of hits on Hong Kong which the media was blaming on Beijing, quoting anti-China activists. Hong Kong publisher Jimmy Lai is on trial for collusion and sedition. The court is currently examining the events of 2020.]
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Mark Simon used the extra-secure Signal app to discuss the issue with the publisher. “There is a question from Mary, as they are a bit confused, as some press reports had saying that you would prefer US not break all ties with Hong Kong," the American wrote.
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Lai replied: "The point is not HK but China. Sanction China as to stop it from clamping down on HK. But after I thought about it, I think they're right to revoke HK’s special status because once the US and China decoupled, HK would be a way out for China. To close this outlet would force it to come to terms easier to the demands of the US.”
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Mark Simon took Lai's reaction as okaying the hit on Hong Kong and promised to relay it to Pompeo's office. “Thanks… will relay,” he wrote on Signal.
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REMOVAL OF 'ONE COUNTRY TWO SYSTEMS' POLICY
Over the following hours and days, the news went public that Hong Kong would now be classified under the same restrictive trading laws as mainland China, with the US effectively cancelling the "one country, two systems" policy.
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Hong Kong people would lose their positive relationship, with the withdrawal of special privileges and special economic treatment, and the city would no longer be allowed import/ export of listed technology items.
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Detailed news of the damaging hit on the city in south China was published on the front page of Apple Daily on July 16. In the West Kowloon court, Lai distanced himself from the incident, saying that he had not read the report in his own newspaper.
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POMPEO CONNECTION CONTINUED
But the connection between Jimmy Lai and the activities of Mike Pompeo, the former CIA director now working as Secretary of State, continued.
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On 24 July 2020, Hong Kong time, Jimmy Lai and Mark Simon received an email with an attached document, marked "sensitive information", the court heard. The email had been sent by US anti-China hawk Christian Whiton, a former White House advisor.
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As well as being sent to Lai and Simon, it was sent to the Hong Kong pair's long-time associates, former US Deputy Secretary of Defense Paul Wolfowitz, and former Vice Chief of Staff of the US Army Jack Keane.
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HARSH ANTI-CHINA POLICY
The attachment was a draft for a new, harsh, US policy position on China to be announced by Mike Pompeo immediately (on July 23, US time) in which he would call for US actions against China to be escalated worldwide, in an attempt to isolate the country.
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"The United Nations, NATO, the G7 countries, the G20, our combined economic, diplomatic, and military power is surely enough to meet this challenge if we direct it clearly and with great courage," Pompeo said. "Maybe it’s time for a new grouping of like-minded nations, a new alliance of democracies."
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Not even 10 days after the US removed the "one country, two systems" policy, Pompeo was claiming that Beijing had removed it. "China walked away from its promise to the world on Hong Kong," it said.
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The speech also mentioned Pompeo's sources. "I’ve talked with Hong Kong’s democracy leaders, from Cardinal Zen to Jimmy Lai. Two days ago in London, I met with Hong Kong freedom fighter Nathan Law," he said.
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The court was earlier shown financial accounts that revealed that Lai and Simon had distributed cash to anti-China activists, including HK$3 million to Cardinal Joseph Zen.
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[Note: Nathan Law is an anti-China campaigner in the west who was sacked from a Washington anti-China operation called the Hong Kong Democracy Council, after serious accusations of sexual harassment.]
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'BRAVO!' TO SECRETARY POMPEO
At the West Kowloon court, Jimmy Lai said that he could not remember if he opened the Pompeo attachment and read the "sensitive information" policy document or not.
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But the court was shown that Lai had a WhatsApp exchange with his Twitter account manager Simon Lee the same day. The publisher told Lee to post a link to Pompeo’s speech, and his praise for Pompeo.
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In court, the defence exhibited three tweets posted on Lai’s Twitter on the same day, all quoting excerpts from Pompeo’s speech. Lai's words expressed enthusiasm for the former CIA director's announcement: "Bravo! Well said Secretary Pompeo."
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In court, Lai admitted having watched the video of the speech and agreed that it advocated hostile actions against China. Lai however claimed that his actions did not show that he himself was advocating hostility towards China.
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HAPPY FOR A NEW COLD WAR
The same day, Jimmy Lai had a WhatsApp exchange with former President of Apple Daily Yeung Wai-hong. Yeung described Pompeo's speech as "a major policy on disengagement with China".
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Lai replied: "Yes, it's very powerful speech. This speech seems to have kicked off the new Cold War with China! Bravo! Mary Kissel should have something to do with it. So proud of our friend."
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Yeung responded: “We and Hong Kong are so lucky to have her to be our close friend. The friendships you assisted to build are really second to none."
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BRITAIN GETS INVOLVED
Also on the same day, Jimmy Lai applauded a British announcement that millions of Hong Kong people would be offered British National (Overseas) passports to move to the UK. "This is urgent and necessary," Lai wrote. "Our young people are the backbone of our freedom movement."
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[Note: About 97% of eligible Hong Kong people ignored the BNO invitation, with a take-up rate of only three per cent, some of whom have now returned.]
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In court, Justice Esther Toh asked what Lai meant by "our freedom movement" and the publisher replied “freedom from mainland China”.
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“So you want Hong Kong to be independent,” the judge said.
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Lai backtracked rapidly. Independence from China is highly unpopular in Hong Kong.
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U.S. USING LAI NARRATIVE
Four days later, on July 28, 2020, Pompeo staff again wrote to Jimmy Lai via Mark Simon, the court heard on Friday.
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Simon used the Signal app to tell Lai that they had message from Peter Berkowitz, director of policy planning at the State Department. This said that he and Pompeo were adopting Lai's narrative that what was really happening in the world was "a war of values" between the US and the Chinese.
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Lai's characterization of the situation, originally printed in the New York Times, would later underpin an August 2020 report in which the US slammed China for human rights violations.
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The trial continues. |
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