US-China summit includes brief but direct appeal by President Trump over jailed Hong Kong publishing magnate
President Donald Trump raised the case of jailed Hong Kong media tycoon Jimmy Lai directly with Chinese President Xi Jinping during their recent meeting in South Korea, according to sources familiar with the talks.
The discussion, lasting under five minutes, did not hinge on a formal deal but focused on concerns about Lai’s health and the broader implications for U.S.–China relations.
Lai, aged 77, founded the now-defunct pro-democracy newspaper Apple Daily and has pleaded not guilty to charges of conspiracy to collude with foreign forces and seditious publishing under Hong Kong’s national-security law.
He has been held in Stanley Prison in solitary confinement for more than 1,700 days and reportedly suffers from heart-related ailments.
According to one administration official, Trump stated that freeing Lai would benefit China’s international image and U.S.–China ties, while another source confirmed that Xi listened but did not publicly commit.
While neither side’s official summary of the summit mentioned the case, a spokesperson for the Chinese Embassy in Washington said she was unaware of specific Lai discussions, restating that Lai’s actions “gravely undermined Hong Kong’s prosperity and stability” and declaring any outside interference “will not succeed.”
Lai’s son, Sebastien Lai, released a statement thanking Trump for the appeal, calling him the “Liberator in Chief” and expressing hope that sustained pressure would lead to his father’s release.
Trump’s intervention arrives amid a broader backdrop of U.S. lawmakers pressing the issue ahead of the summit and amid affirmations by both sides that the meeting had advanced trade talks and rare-earth agreements rather than human-rights issues.
Though recent meetings between the U.S. and China have placed less emphasis on rights, this case highlights that it remains part of the diplomatic ledger.
Whether Trump’s appeal will lead to a tangible outcome remains uncertain.
Analysts say the brief exchange signals U.S. willingness to link rights and health-humanitarian concerns to broader diplomatic engagement, while China’s silence may reflect a cautious balancing act between domestic legal processes and foreign-policy optics.
The coming weeks will test whether this exchange constitutes mere symbolic diplomacy or blossoms into further pressure, advocacy and potential progress in Lai’s case, and whether U.S.–China relations will interpret it as part of a wider reset or retain rights concerns in their interactions.
The discussion, lasting under five minutes, did not hinge on a formal deal but focused on concerns about Lai’s health and the broader implications for U.S.–China relations.
Lai, aged 77, founded the now-defunct pro-democracy newspaper Apple Daily and has pleaded not guilty to charges of conspiracy to collude with foreign forces and seditious publishing under Hong Kong’s national-security law.
He has been held in Stanley Prison in solitary confinement for more than 1,700 days and reportedly suffers from heart-related ailments.
According to one administration official, Trump stated that freeing Lai would benefit China’s international image and U.S.–China ties, while another source confirmed that Xi listened but did not publicly commit.
While neither side’s official summary of the summit mentioned the case, a spokesperson for the Chinese Embassy in Washington said she was unaware of specific Lai discussions, restating that Lai’s actions “gravely undermined Hong Kong’s prosperity and stability” and declaring any outside interference “will not succeed.”
Lai’s son, Sebastien Lai, released a statement thanking Trump for the appeal, calling him the “Liberator in Chief” and expressing hope that sustained pressure would lead to his father’s release.
Trump’s intervention arrives amid a broader backdrop of U.S. lawmakers pressing the issue ahead of the summit and amid affirmations by both sides that the meeting had advanced trade talks and rare-earth agreements rather than human-rights issues.
Though recent meetings between the U.S. and China have placed less emphasis on rights, this case highlights that it remains part of the diplomatic ledger.
Whether Trump’s appeal will lead to a tangible outcome remains uncertain.
Analysts say the brief exchange signals U.S. willingness to link rights and health-humanitarian concerns to broader diplomatic engagement, while China’s silence may reflect a cautious balancing act between domestic legal processes and foreign-policy optics.
The coming weeks will test whether this exchange constitutes mere symbolic diplomacy or blossoms into further pressure, advocacy and potential progress in Lai’s case, and whether U.S.–China relations will interpret it as part of a wider reset or retain rights concerns in their interactions.







































