Beijing has done irreparable damage to Hong Kong after freezing top media mogul's assets Johnny Patterson is the Policy Director of Hong Kong Watch Seven prominent democratic figures, including Apple Daily founder Jimmy Lai, former lawmaker and barrister Martin Lee and Margaret Ng, were convicted of unauthorized assembly in relation to a peaceful protest on August 18, 2019. (Photo by Anthony Kwan/Getty Images) On Friday, the owner of Hong Kong’s biggest pro-democracy newspaper had his assets, amounting to HKD$500 million, frozen. Mr Lai was already facing trumped up charges under the National Security Law, but this step is the biggest blow to date for press freedoms and puts the long-run viability of his newspaper, Apple Daily, into question. It ushers in a new era: one where previously inviolable property rights are up for grabs. While arrests naturally garner headlines, it is government decisions like this one which are most likely to catalyse capital flight and spark migration.