Hong Kong justice secretary seeks control of Jimmy Lai's bank accounts and companies
Seizure application targets 62 bank accounts with HK$56.5 million and 17 companies including Next Digital
En resumen
- Hong Kong's justice secretary has applied to take control of media tycoon Jimmy Lai's assets, seeking to seize 62 personal and corporate bank accounts holding HK$56.5 million and shares in 17 companies.
- The application includes Next Digital, the parent company of defunct Apple Daily, in which Lai holds a 71.26% stake.
- Shares in two companies could be worth HK$71.4 million.
Resumen generado por IA
Por qué importa
Jimmy Lai is a prominent pro-democracy media tycoon and founder of Apple Daily, which was forced to shut down in 2021 after police raided its newsroom under the National Security Law. Lai is currently serving a prison sentence for various charges and faces additional national security charges.
The application, seen by the South China Morning Post on Tuesday, said Lai controlled 62 personal and corporate bank accounts in Hong Kong, with remaining balances totalling HK$56.5 million. The justice secretary also sought to take over control of 17 companies owned by Lai by ordering the forfeiture of "all shares under the defendant's own name or under the names of the respective shareholders". Those companies included Next Digital, the parent company of the now-defunct Apple Daily newspaper, in which Lai still holds a 71.26 per cent shareholding. The combined value of the stakes remains unclear, but the court filing said Lai's shares in two of those firms, Comitex Holdings and Comitex Knitters, could be worth HK$71.4 million in total.
Qué observar
Perspectiva de IA — posibilidades, no hechos
Court will likely approve the asset forfeiture application within months
Muy probable · En meses
Next Digital will be dissolved or sold following forfeiture
Probable · En meses
Preguntas abiertas
- What is the total value of all assets being seized?
- When will the court rule on the application?
- What will happen to the companies after forfeiture?






