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  • Jailed Hong Kong tycoon’s ‘teeth rotting and fingernails falling off’

    Jailed Hong Kong tycoon’s ‘teeth rotting and fingernails falling off’


    AFP via Getty Images Extreme close up of Jimmy Lai wearing a blue collared shirt looking into the cameraAFP via Getty Images

    Jimmy Lai is seen here in a 2020 photo taken months before he went to jail

    The daughter of Jimmy Lai, the pro-democracy tycoon jailed in Hong Kong, has expressed concerns about her father’s deteriorating health in prison, saying that his fingernails “sometimes fall off” and his teeth are rotting.

    Lai, 78, has been detained since December 2020 and faces life in prison. Earlier this month he was convicted of colluding with foreign forces under the city’s controversial national security law (NSL).

    Chinese authorities have denied that Lai has been mistreated in prison, and said he is in “good health”.

    The BBC has seen a letter written by Lai’s family urging UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer call for Lai’s release when he meets Chinese President Xi Jinping next month.

    His daughter Claire Lai, who’s in exile in London, told the BBC that she fears she “may never see him again”.

    “Of course I worry that my father is going to be a martyr, and I don’t want him to be a martyr. But I would not be here today, I would not be speaking out if I didn’t think this was his best chance of reuniting with our family.”

    She described her father as an “extremely robust and strong man” when he went to prison, but has over the last year he has “lost a significant amount of weight”.

    “He is diabetic, he has heart issues which he never had in the past. He has fingernails that turn purplish grey and sometimes fall off. He has teeth that are rotting.

    “He has back and waist pains. Some days it’s painful for him to stand. Sometimes he can’t stand. And some days he can’t even get out of bed.”

    Lai’s family has on multiple occasions flagged concerns about his deteriorating health. Lai’s son, Sebastien, told the BBC earlier this year that his father’s “body is breaking down”.

    A spokesperson for the Commissioner’s Office of the Chinese Foreign Ministry in Hong Kong stated earlier this month that Lai’s “lawful rights and interests have been fully protected, and he is in good health”.

    They added that “a safe, humane, appropriate, and healthy custodial environment in accordance with the law” has been provided for Lai.

    Claire Lai with her hair in a bun, wearing a grey blazer. She is in the middle of speaking.

    Claire Lai is on a campaign to get her father released from prison

    Lai, a UK citizen, is the most prominent person to be charged under the NSL, introduced in 2020 in response to massive pro-democracy protests in Hong Kong.

    Beijing defends the law as necessary to maintain stability in Hong Kong, but critics say it has effectively outlawed dissent.

    Lai was accused of lobbying foreign governments to impose sanctions on Hong Kong and China. He was also found guilty under a separate colonial-era law of publishing seditious material in his now-defunct Apple Daily newspaper.

    After Lai’s conviction earlier this month, the UK condemned it as “politically motivated persecution”, saying that he had been “targeted… for peacefully exercising his right to freedom of expression”.

    “The UK has repeatedly called for the National Security Law to be repealed and for an end to the prosecution of all individuals charged under it,” the Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office said.

    In their statement earlier this month, Chinese authorities said Western attempts “to influence judicial verdicts through political pressure blatantly trample on the spirit of the rule of law and fully expose their hypocritical ‘double standards’. The Chinese side firmly opposes this.”

    Starmer’s trip to China in late January 2026 will be the first by a UK Prime Minister since 2018.



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  • Damien Martyn: Former Australia batter in coma in hospital with meningitis

    Damien Martyn: Former Australia batter in coma in hospital with meningitis


    Meningitis is an infection of the protective membranes that surround the brain and spinal cord.

    Former Australian Rules football star Brad Hardie, speaking on Perth’s 6PR radio station, said: “Damien Martyn, the champ from WA [Western Australia] unfortunately took ill on Boxing Day and currently is residing in a Queensland hospital.

    “I’d like everybody to have their best wishes and positive thoughts for Marto. Let’s hope he can pull through, because it’s really serious.”

    Northamptonshire head coach Darren Lehmann, a former Australia team-mate, wrote on X:, external “Lots of love and prayers…Keep strong and fighting legend.”

    During his career, Martyn scored 4,406 Test runs at an average of 46.37.

    He was also a prolific one-day international batter, scoring 5,346 runs from 208 matches at an average of 40, with five hundreds and 37 fifties.

    He scored an unbeaten 88 as Australia beat India in the 2003 World Cup final despite batting with a broken finger, and represented Yorkshire as an overseas player in 2003.



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  • Thailand releases 18 Cambodian soldiers held since July

    Thailand releases 18 Cambodian soldiers held since July


    Thailand has released 18 Cambodian soldiers that were captured in July during deadly border clashes as part of a ceasefire the two countries agreed to on Saturday.

    The handover was delayed by a day over Thai concerns over alleged violations of the ceasefire, but took place after sustained Chinese diplomatic pressure to ensure the deal holds.

    Simmering tensions along Thailand-Cambodia border exploded early this month and went on for weeks, forcing nearly one million people from their homes.

    Saturday’s deal had seen both sides agree to freeze the front lines where they are now, ban reinforcements and allow civilians living in border areas to return as soon as possible.

    The 18 Cambodian soldiers, dressed in civilian clothes, were greeted by well-wishers as they were escorted over a border checkpoint and handed to the Cambodian authorities.

    Their captivity since July – during an earlier round of deadly clashes – has inflamed nationalist sentiment in Cambodia, their release being one of the main demands of the its government in the ceasefire talks with Thailand.

    On Wednesday, Thailand’s foreign ministry said the release of the soldiers was a “demonstration of goodwill” and that it hopes Cambodia would “reciprocate this goodwill through its concrete actions”.

    Cambodia confirmed the return of its troops, with its defence ministry saying it “remains hopeful” that this will help build “mutual trust and confidence”.

    One of the terms of the ceasefire was that the 18 soldiers had to be handed over within 72 hours – by noon local time on Tuesday. But this was delayed after Thailand Bangkok accused Phnom Penh of violating the truce by flying more than 250 unmanned aerial vehicles into Thailand on Sunday.

    Despite Thailand’s complaints, the latest ceasefire appears to be holding so far.

    Disagreement over the border dates back more than a century, but tension increased early this year after a group of Cambodian women sang patriotic songs in a disputed temple.

    A Cambodian soldier was killed in a clash in May. Then in July, five days of intense fighting along the border left dozens of soldiers and civilians dead. Thousands more civilians were displaced.

    The two countries agreed to a fragile ceasefire in July and signed it in October, brokered by US President Donald Trump. But the ceasefire collapsed when fresh tensions erupted early this month, with both sides accusing the other for the breakdown.



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