Media tycoon Jimmy Lai, seen in 2020. (Anthony Wallace / AFP - Getty Images)

HONG KONG —Hong Kongpro-democracy activistJimmy Laiis set to be sentenced Monday after hisconviction in a landmark national security trialthat has drawn international attention and become a symbol of Beijing'scrackdown on dissentin the Chinese territory.

Lai, a 78-year-old media tycoon who was one of the most prominent critics of China's ruling Communist Party, faces possible life in prison. The case has been criticized by the U.S. and other governments as politically motivated and a sign of shrinking space for dissent in Hong Kong, a former British colony thatreturned to Chinese rulein 1997.

"The eyes of the world will be on Hong Kong," Aleksandra Bielakowska of Reporters Without Borders, a press freedom advocacy group, said in a statement Friday. "The outcome will resonate far beyond Jimmy Lai himself, sending a decisive signal about the future of press freedom in the territory."

Rights groups and members of Lai's family have also expressed concern about his health after he's spent more than 1,800 days in custody, much of it in solitary confinement. Hong Kong officials say Lai has received appropriate medical care and that he had requested to be kept separate from other prisoners.

Lai was arrested and charged in 2020, shortly after Beijing imposed asweeping national security lawin response to months of anti-government protests the previous year. Hong Kong authorities say the law was necessary to restore stability after the protests, which sometimes turned violent, and that Lai's case has nothing to do with press freedom.

The case has drawn scrutiny from foreign leaders including PresidentDonald Trump, who hadvowed to secure Lai's releaseand said he felt "so badly" after Lai was convicted in December on charges of sedition and colluding with foreign forces. British Prime MinisterKeir Starmer, who met with Chinese leaderXi Jinpingin Beijing last month, also said he had raised the issue of Lai, who is a British citizen.

Hong Kong officials have defended the independence of the local judicial system, which is separate from that of mainland China, and accused foreign governments of interfering in internal affairs. Chief Justice Andrew Cheung, Hong Kong's top judge, said in a speech last month that calls for Lai's premature release "strike at the very heart of the rule of law itself."

Lai — the founder of Apple Daily, a popular pro-democracy tabloid that wasforced to shut downin 2021 — was convicted on one charge of conspiring to publish seditious articles and two charges of conspiring to lobby foreign governments to impose sanctions, blockades or other hostile measures againstChinaand Hong Kong.

In their 855-page verdict, the three handpicked judges cited Lai's interactions with senior U.S. government officials, including meetings he had at the height of the 2019 protests with Vice PresidentMike Pence, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, national security adviser John Bolton and multiple members of Congress.

Lai pleaded not guilty to all charges. Also being sentenced in the case on Monday are six former Apple Daily journalists and two activists, some of whom testified against Lai, and all of whom pleaded guilty in the hope of receiving reduced sentences.

Lai had already been convicted separately on a number of lesser charges including fraud and unlawful assembly. In December 2022, he was sentenced to five years and nine months in prison in the fraud case.

Hong Kong democracy activist Jimmy Lai to be sentenced after national security conviction

HONG KONG —Hong Kongpro-democracy activistJimmy Laiis set to be sentenced Monday after hisconviction in a landmark national security trial...
France's former culture minister resigns over Epstein-linked tax fraud probe

PARIS (AP) — France's former Culture Minister Jack Lang has resigned as head of a Paris cultural center over alleged past financial links to convicted sex offenderJeffrey Epsteinthat prompted a tax investigation.

He is the highest-profile figure in France impacted bythe release of Epstein fileson Jan. 30 by the U.S. Department of Justice. He is known for his role as a culture minister under Socialist President François Mitterrand in the 1980s and 1990s.

Lang, 86, was summoned to appear at the French Foreign Ministry, which oversees the Arab World Institute, on Sunday, but he submitted his resignation.

He "is very sad and deeply hurt to be leaving a position he loves," his lawyer Laurent Merlet said Sunday on RTL radio. "He put the interests of the Arab World Institute first," Merlet said, adding that his client denied the allegations and called them inaccurate.

The Foreign Ministry confirmed his resignation Saturday evening.

The financial prosecutors' office said it had opened an investigation into Lang and his daughter, Caroline, over alleged "aggravated tax fraud laundering."

French investigative news website Mediapart reported last week on alleged financial and business ties between the Lang family and Jeffrey Epstein through an offshore company based in the U.S. Virgin Islands in the Caribbean Sea.

Jack Lang's name was mentioned more than 600 times in the Epstein files, showing intermittent correspondence between 2012 and 2019. His daughter was also in the released files.

Foreign Minister Jean-Noël Barrot has "taken note" of Lang's resignation and began the process to look for his successor, the foreign ministry said.

Lang headed the Arab World Institute since 2013.

France's former culture minister resigns over Epstein-linked tax fraud probe

PARIS (AP) — France's former Culture Minister Jack Lang has resigned as head of a Paris cultural center over alleged...
Japan's Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi (R) speaks during a meeting in Tokyo on February 5, 2026

Japan's ruling party, led by Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi, is projected to have won Sunday's snap election by a landslide.

An exit poll by public broadcaster NHK suggests the coalition led by Takaichi's Liberal Democrat Party (LDP) is set to win two-thirds of seats in Japan's House of Representatives. The LDP alone is forecast to have a majority of seats.

The country's first female prime minister had sought a clear public mandate by calling the election just four months after becoming party leader.

Her reported success is in marked contrast to her two predecessors, under whom the party lost its parliamentary majority due to corruption scandals and rising costs.

Takaichi previously pledged to step down if her party failed to secure a majority, and some called the snap election a big gamble.

The LDP lost its majority in both houses of parliament in 2024, and its decades-old coalition with the Komeito party collapsed.

But Takaichi's personal popularity appears to have helped the party, with approval ratings for her government mostly hovering above 70%.

The LDP and its current coalition partner, the Japan Innovation Party, could secure as many as 366 of the 465 seats in the House of Representatives, according to NHK projections as votes continue to be counted.

US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent has already hailed a "big victory" for Takaichi, saying that "when Japan is strong, the US is strong in Asia".

People across Japan braved snow to vote in the country's first mid-winter poll in 36 years.

Rumi and Daniel Hayama smiling as Rumi hold their son.

Japan's transport ministry said 37 train lines and 58 ferry routes were closed and 54 flights cancelled as of Sunday morning. There was rare snowfall in Tokyo as people headed out to vote.

"People want their lives to be better and more comfortable because we are so accustomed to not having inflation [costs rising]... so people are very worried. I think we need a long-term solution rather than short-term fixes," Ritsuko Ninomiya, a voter in Tokyo, told the BBC.

Takaichi's enthusiasm, populist spending promises and nationalist rhetoric appear to have energised voters.

Her social media presence has also cultivated new followers, particularly among young voters. She regularly shares clips of her daily life and political activities, and a video of her playing the drums with South Korean President Lee Jae Myung is one of many clips to have gone viral.

"I think this election is more important for the younger generation, people like us," Daniel Hayama said, adding that the cold weather was not a hurdle for young people who want to vote.

Takaichi and the LDP faced a more unified opposition than before. LDP's former coalition partner Komeito has joined forces with the Constitutional Democratic Party of Japan to form the largest opposition bloc in the lower house.

Takaichi has pushed to toughen the immigration system, review rules around foreign ownership of Japanese land, and tackle any non-payments of tax and health insurance by foreign nationals.

But in a country where only 3% of the population are foreign nationals, critics have accused her of creating anxiety and division.

A child (L) holds umbrellas as voters take part in the House of Representatives election at a polling station in Tokyo on February 8, 2026.

Critics, including businesses, are sceptical that her pledge to spend more and cut taxes can revive the sluggish Japanese economy. The country's government debt is already one of the highest among developed nations.

Relations with China - Japan's largest trading partner - have been strained as well, after Takaichi suggested last November that Japan could intervene militarily if China invaded Taiwan.

With a two-thirds majority, Takaichi would be a strong position to considering her long-held aim of changing Japan's pacifist constitution.

Takaichi has courted Donald Trump, who has publicly endorsed her - an unusual move by a US president - and they both seem to agree that Japan should spend more on defence.

That relationship too was on voters' minds as they headed to the polls on Sunday.

"I am concerned with what President Trump is doing as well as the national defence issues. I am not sure where the money is coming from to cover that. So balancing budget spending between defence and people's life is a major concern for me," Yuko Sakai says.

Additional reporting by Kelly Ng and Chika Nakayama

Japan's governing party on course for landslide election win

Japan's ruling party, led by Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi, is projected to have won Sunday's snap election by a landslide. An...
North Carolina basketball stuns Duke on last-second shot, court stormed early

North Carolina basketball stunnedDukein an upset so nice,it stormed the court twice.

On what looked to be the final possession of a 68-68 game, North Carolina guard Derek Dixon drove to the basket and kicked it out to Seth Trimble in the corner. Trimble hit what appeared to be a buzzer-beating 3 to give the Tar Heels a 71-68 win to hand Duke its second loss of the season,kicking off a party in Chapel Hillthat started with storming the court.

REQUIRED READING:Duke vs UNC basketball highlights: Tar Heels win on last-second shot

The problem is, that party kicked off a bit early. After review, officials found that there were still 0.4 seconds on the clock, sending UNC fans shambling back to their seats or the sidelines and kicking off a clean-up on the court. Luckily, the court clearing was handled expeditiously, and they were able to finish the game.

THIS RIVALRY DOES NOT DISAPPOINT ‼️SETH TRIMBLE GAME-WINNER FOR NORTH CAROLINA 🔥pic.twitter.com/uVsOm9DIav

— SportsCenter (@SportsCenter)February 8, 2026

No. 4 Duke fell to 21-2 on the year, whereas No. 18 North Carolina advanced to 19-4. North Carolina only led for the final 0.4 seconds of the game, and staved off its fourth straight loss to the Blue Devils.

While Trimble will go down as the hero, it was the efforts of Caleb Wilson that had the Tar Heels in a position to win. He had 23 points and played the full 40 for UNC, going toe-to-toe with Blue Devils star Cameron Boozer, who put up 24 points in 38 minutes despite some early foul trouble.

Duke and North Carolina will play again on March 7, undoubtedly with some more vitriol than usual coming in. The only emotion stronger than the love these teams have of beating each other is the hatred of losing to each other. Duke has a month to reckon with that feeling, which came in heartbreaking fashion.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:UNC basketball stuns Duke on late 3-pointer, court stormed early

North Carolina basketball stuns Duke on last-second shot, court stormed early

North Carolina basketball stunnedDukein an upset so nice,it stormed the court twice. On what looked to be the ...
Jokic's triple-double powers Nuggets past Bulls 136-120 as Denver ends 3-game skid

CHICAGO (AP) — Nikola Jokic had 22 points, 17 assists and 14 rebounds for his second triple-double in as many games, Jamal Murray had 28 points and 11 assists and the Denver Nuggets ended a three-game skid with a 136-120 victory over the Chicago Bulls on Saturday night.

It was Jokic's 19th triple-double of the season. Tim Hardaway Jr. added 23 points for the Nuggets, who capped a three-game road trip with a win after losing at Detroit and New York.

Matas Buzelis scored 21 points and Collin Sexton added 17 for the Bulls, who have lost four straight.

The Bulls led 104-97 after closing the third period on a 16-2 run, but Denver started the final quarter on a 20-2 spurt to take the lead for good. Jokic and Julian Strawther capped the run with consecutive 3-pointers.

Chicago went the first six minutes of the fourth before making its first field goal and finished the final period 5 for 17 from the floor.

Jokic had nine points, 11 rebounds and seven assists in 17 first-half minutes, but the Bulls led 65-59 at the intermission.

Nuggets: Host Cleveland on Monday night.

Bulls: Visit Brooklyn on Monday night.

AP NBA:https://apnews.com/hub/NBA

Jokic's triple-double powers Nuggets past Bulls 136-120 as Denver ends 3-game skid

CHICAGO (AP) — Nikola Jokic had 22 points, 17 assists and 14 rebounds for his second triple-double in as many games, Jam...
Jon Scheyer says Duke staff members were punched in face during UNC's court storming: 'This rivalry is not about that'

No. 14 North Carolina came back from 13 points down, and Seth Trimbledrilled the 3-pointer of his life to defeat No. 4 Duke 71-68 on Saturday night in the Dean Smith Center.

What followed was mayhem: two court storms, one when Tar Heels fans thought the game was over, and the second after the final 0.4 seconds ticked off the clock.

For UNC, it was joyous.

For Duke, it was painful — emotionally and, according to Jon Scheyer, physically, too.

The Blue Devils' head coachtold reportersafter the loss that Duke staff members were punched in the face during the game-ending frenzy.

"It's hard to talk about the game when I was most concerned just for the safety of our players after the game,"Scheyer said in his postgame news conference, via The Field of 68. "I don't want to make it about that because Carolina, they played a great game to win, and that's a heartbreaking loss for our team.

"[But] I got staff members that got punched in the face. My family pushing people away, trying to not get trampled. That's not what this game is about. You give them all the credit in the world. It's not about the game, but obviously that was a scary ending — and this rivalry is not about that."

Here's Part II, with UNC hanging on for the win and fans storming the court for a second time.pic.twitter.com/bMi66wc1OP

— Awful Announcing (@awfulannouncing)February 8, 2026

UNC athletic director Bubba Cunningham publicly apologized and said that he personally apologized to Scheyer after the game.

"When they rushed the court, a number of people got knocked over," Cunningham said,per The Fayetteville Observer's Rodd Baxley. "But then we had to clear the court again. So when we normally have something like just rushing the court and the game is over, we do have a line by the benches to get people off safely.

"... Obviously, if somebody got injured, that's just really, really disappointing. We'll do the best we can to make sure that doesn't happen, but, again, my apologies to Duke for that."

Here's what UNC athletics director Bubba Cunningham said about the court-storming situation after the Tar Heels' win against Dukepic.twitter.com/vayPYK42wj

— Rodd Baxley (@RoddBaxley)February 8, 2026

This isn't the first time the 38-year-old Scheyer has been outspoken about a court storming.

In fact,he called for the celebration's ban just about two years ago.

At the time, Scheyer was in the second season of his now-four-season tenure as the head coach of his alma mater, which he helped win a national title for as a guard in 2010.

Duke had just been upset by Wake Forest, and star forward Kyle Filipowski injured his knee amid the court storming chaos.

"When are we going to ban court stormings?" Scheyersaid postgameon Feb. 24, 2024.

"When I played, at least it was 10 seconds and then they would run on the floor," headded. "Now, the buzzer doesn't even go off and they're running on the floor. This has happened to us a bunch this year."

Scheyer was asked Saturday night if he still feels like court storming should be banned.

"I think court storming is fine, I don't have any issue with court storming," he said,per The Associated Press. "Just shouldn't have people getting punched in the face. Shouldn't put our players in position where they're face-to-face with people who can do anything at that time. It just takes one reaction. Even today, I had to push people away just to try to protect our players."

Scheyer added, according to the AP: "They won, they should celebrate. "They want to court storm, court storm. But just let's get our guys off safely, that's it. That's where I'm at with that."

While Saturday's double court storm caught the public's eye, given the grand stage Duke-UNC provides, it's happened before.

Actually, just last week,UCF's court storm took tries. The first time, fans were herded back to their seats after officials determined that then-No. 11 Texas Tech was due two free throws because of a last-second foul.

After those attempts, the buzzer sounded once more, and the pandemonium resumed.

Jon Scheyer says Duke staff members were punched in face during UNC's court storming: 'This rivalry is not about that'

No. 14 North Carolina came back from 13 points down, and Seth Trimbledrilled the 3-pointer of his life to defeat No. 4 D...
Hospitalized toddler was returned to ICE detention and denied prescribed medication, lawsuit says

An 18-month-old baby held with her parents ata South Texas immigration detention centerbecame so ill last month that she was rushed to a hospital with life-threatening respiratory failure — then sent back to detention days later, where she was denied daily medication doctors prescribed, according to a federal lawsuit filed Friday.

NBC Universal Arrieta Valero Family. (via Elora Mukherjee)

The toddler, Amalia, remained in detention for another nine days and was released only after lawyers filed an emergency habeas corpus petition in federal court challenging her continued confinement. She was freed Friday after the filing.

Amalia had been healthy before immigration officers arrested her family in El Paso in December and transferred them to the Dilley Immigration Processing Center, a remote, prisonlike facility where hundreds of immigrant children are held with their parents. Advocates and pediatric experts have warned that conditions at the center are unsafe for young children.

Amalia's health quickly deteriorated, the lawsuit says. On Jan. 18, she was rushed to a children's hospital in San Antonio, where doctors treated her for pneumonia, Covid-19, RSV and severe respiratory distress.

Amalia. (via Elora Mukherjee)

"She was at the brink of dying," said Elora Mukherjee, a Columbia Law School professor and the director of the school's Immigrants' Rights Clinic, who filed the petition seeking the family's release.

Yet after Amalia's return to Dilley on Jan. 28, federal officials "denied her access to the medication that doctors prescribed for her at the hospital" the lawsuit says, forcing her parents to "wait in long lines for hours outside daily" to request the medicine, only to be turned away.

After days of intensive treatment on oxygen, Amalia began to recover. But her discharge from the hospital was not the end of her ordeal.

Despite warnings from medical experts that the toddler remained medically vulnerable and at high risk of reinfection, immigration officers returned Amalia and her mother to the detention center, the lawsuit says.

"After baby Amalia had been hospitalized for 10 days, ICE thought this baby should be returned to Dilley, where she was denied access to the medicines that the hospital doctors told her she needed," Mukherjee said. "It is so outrageous."

The Department of Homeland Security didn't immediately respond to a request for comment. It has defended its use of family detention, saying in statements and legal filings that detainees are provided basic necessities and that officials work to ensure children and adults are safe.

CoreCivic, the company that runs Dilley under a federal contract, deferred questions about the facility to DHS and said in a statement that "the health and safety of those entrusted to our care" is the company's top priority.

Amalia's case comes amid heightened scrutiny of conditions at Dilley, which was thrust into the national spotlight last month after immigration authoritiesdetained Liam Conejo Ramos, a 5-year-old boy taken into custody with his father — an episode that drew widespread outrage after a photograph showed the child in a blue bunny hat as he was led away by officers.

Accounts fromdetained families, their lawyers and court filingsportray Dilley as a place where hundreds of children languish while being served contaminated food, receiving little education and struggling to obtain basic medical care. Sworn declarationsfrom dozens of parentssay prolonged confinement takes a heavy physical and psychological toll on children — including regression, weight loss, recurring illness and nightmares — as the federal government expands the use of family detention.

Like many other families held at Dilley, lawyers for Amalia's parents say the family should never have been detained.

Kheilin Valero Marcano and Stiven Arrieta Prieto entered the United States in 2024 after fleeing Venezuela, where they say they faced persecution for their political opposition to President Nicolás Maduro, according to the lawsuit. During their journey north, Valero Marcano gave birth to Amalia in Mexico.

They applied for asylum through the government-run appointment system CBP One, and immigration authorities allowed the family to live in El Paso while their case moved forward. According to the lawsuit, they checked in regularly with immigration officials and complied with all requirements, including participation in an alternative-to-detention monitoring program.

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That changed on Dec. 11, when the family reported together for a check-in and was taken into custody, according to the lawsuit. Two days later, they were transferred to the Dilley Immigration Processing Center, a sprawling complex an hour south of San Antonio, more than 500 miles from the community where they had been living.

Once inside Dilley, the parents say their daughter's health deteriorated quickly. In early January, Amalia developed a high fever that would not break. She began vomiting, had diarrhea and struggled to breathe.

A dense crowd of hundreds of people wearing raincoats and hoods is seen from an aerial perspective. Many of them are holding signs. (Brenda Bazán / AP)

As she grew weaker, her parents said they repeatedly took her to the facility's medical clinic — eight or nine times, according to the lawsuit — seeking help. Each visit ended the same way, according to the lawsuit: basic fever medication.

By mid-January, Amalia was barely getting enough oxygen. On Jan. 18, the lawsuit said, her blood oxygen levels plunged into the 50s — ​a life-threatening emergency — and she was taken out of the facility with her mother to a hospital. Her father remained behind at Dilley, unable to communicate with his wife or see his daughter as doctors worked to save her.

She spent 10 days at Methodist Children's Hospital in San Antonio, much of that time on oxygen, as her lungs struggled to recover. Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers maintained constant supervision over Amalia and her mother throughout the hospitalization, according to the lawsuit.

Mukherjee said the girl's mother spent the days praying at her daughter's bedside, terrified she would die — and was later devastated to learn that, once discharged, they would be sent back to detention.

When Amalia was released from the hospital on Jan. 28, doctors gave clear instructions, medical records cited in the lawsuit show: She needed breathing treatments delivered by nebulizer and nutritional supplements to help her regain strength and weight.

Instead of allowing them to return to El Paso, immigration officers drove Amalia and her mother back to Dilley, the lawsuit says.

Once there, detention medical staff confiscated Amalia's nebulizer, albuterol and nutritional supplements. The parents were required to wait daily for hours in what detainees have described in interviews and sworn declarations as the "pill line" — an outdoor queue families must stand in to obtain medicine and other necessities.

Amalia shivered in her mother's arms as they waited in the cold, Mukherjee said, only to be given PediaSure and denied the breathing medication doctors had prescribed.

As Amalia remained in detention, Mukherjee and other immigration lawyers repeatedly urged federal officials to release the family, warning that the child's condition could rapidly worsen.

Medical experts who reviewed Amalia's records submitted affidavits cautioning that returning a medically fragile toddler to detention — particularly without reliable access to prescribed medication — put her at extreme danger. One physician warned that the child faced a "high risk for medical decompensation and death."

Mukherjee's efforts intensified after health officialsconfirmed two measles casesamong people held at Dilley.

When those appeals failed, Mukherjee filed the emergency challenge in federal court seeking the family's release.

Hours later, on Friday evening, the family was freed. Mukherjee said ICE failed to turn over Amalia's prescriptions as well as her birth certificate. The parents weren't immediately available for an interview.

The reprieve brought them relief, Mukherjee said, but she expects the experience will have lasting consequences.

"I imagine they're going to carry the trauma of this experience for the rest of their lives," she said.

Hospitalized toddler was returned to ICE detention and denied prescribed medication, lawsuit says

An 18-month-old baby held with her parents ata South Texas immigration detention centerbecame so ill last month that she...

 

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