Pro-democracy media tycoon Jimmy Lai's long-awaited trial over charges that he "colluded with foreign forces" has begun in Hong Kong. The 76-year-old, who has been behind bars since December 2020, could be jailed for life if he is found guilty. Lai was arrested under the National Security Law, which China has been accused of wielding to crush dissent. His case has caused international uproar and is widely seen as a test of Hong Kong's judicial independence. Lai is one of more than 250 activists, lawmakers and protesters who have been detained under National Security Law (NSL) and sedition charges since 2020. Beijing, which introduced the NSL in 2020 in response to massive pro-democracy protests, insists that the law is necessary to quell unrest. It considers Lai a traitor who sought to undermine China's national security. But critics say Lai's case is yet another example of Beijing's tightening grip on Hong Kong. Apart from the NSL charges, he is also facing a sedition charge under a colonial-era law based on his tweets, interviews he hosted, as well as articles published in the now-defunct Apple Daily newspaper he owned. Lai's international legal team told the BBC he has been denied his right to a fair hearing. Jonathan Price, a member of Lai's London-based legal team described it as "lawfare". Lai's lawyers point to the fact that he was denied his choice of legal representation, after Beijing barred him from appointing a UK lawyer, and that he is being tried by three judges handpicked by Hong Kong's leader John Lee. "I am gravely concerned that anyone is facing prosecution under the National Security Law, and particularly concerned at the politically motivated prosecution of British national Jimmy Lai," UK Foreign Secretary David Cameron said on Sunday, while calling for Lai's release. Lai, who was born in China and moved to Hong Kong as a child, is now a UK citizen. His son, Sebastian Lai, has been lobbying the British government to intervene on his father's behalf. He met Cameron earlier this month, drawing Beijing's ire. Cameron said Lai was "targeted in a clear attempt to stop the peaceful exercise of his rights to freedom of expression and association". Inside the courtroom, a noticeably thinner Lai sat in a light grey blazer and blue shirt. He has been held in solitary confinement in a maximum-security prison since he was detained three years ago. The trial, which has been delayed for a year, is expected to last for about 80 days. Outside the heavily guarded courthouse, 77-year-old Alexandra Wong - a prominent pro-democracy activist better known as Grandma Wong - staged a lone protest, shouting slogans even as she was surrounded by police. She has been detained and even jailed in the past for protesting. "I support Jimmy Lai because I want truth," Ms Wong said. "People won't trust us. I wish he can come out soon. I wish to read Apple Daily again." Lai, an outspoken critic of the Chinese Communist Party, is one of the most high-profile people to be arrested under Hong Kong's National Security Law. He was often on the frontline of Hong Kong's pro-democracy protests, from the Umbrella Movement in 2014 to the huge demonstrations against a Beijing-backed extradition bill in 2019. He founded and ran some of Hong Kong's best-known media outlets, including Apple Daily. Lai was born in Guangzhou in southern China in 1947 to a wealthy family, which lost everything when the communists took power. He fled China when he was just 12 and entered Hong Kong as a stowaway on a boat. He started working in a garment sweatshop. He taught himself English and eventually founded the international clothing brand Giordano. After Beijing sent tanks to crush pro-democracy protests in Tiananmen Square in 1989, Lai's career veered towards political activism and media. Decades later, he was handed his first jail sentence in Hong Kong - 13 months long - for participating in a banned vigil for the Tiananmen massacre. Some of the most serious charges Lai is facing now centre on Apple Daily, which he founded in 1995. The Chinese-language tabloid had been staunchly critical of Beijing and at one point called for international sanctions against Chinese and Hong Kong officials. The newspaper was forced to shut down in June 2021, after police froze $2.3m of its assets, raided its offices and arrested some of its top editors. HongKongers grieved the closure of what was seen as the city's last independent newspaper. Six former Apple Daily executives were arrested along with Lai. They were accused of "colluding with foreign forces" to endanger national security, and have since pleaded guilty. Human Rights Watch has condemned Lai's trial as a "travesty". The group's China director Maya Wang called on "concerned governments" to press authorities to drop Lai's charges, which she says has "contributed to seriously damaging press freedom in Hong Kong". Beijing's and Hong Kong's actions have "undermined Hong Kong's democratic institutions and harmed Hong Kong's reputation as an international business and financial hub", US State Department's spokesperson Matthew Miller said. China has denounced what it sees as international intervention in Lai's case. "The UK's backing of an anti-China, Hong Kong destabiliser who broke the law constitutes a flagrant interference in a case that has already entered judicial proceedings," the Chinese embassy in the UK said. Lai's trial begins two weeks after the end of another long-running national security trial against pro-democracy figures known as the Hong Kong 47. A verdict is expected in March. Last week, Hong Kong police offered a fresh batch of bounties for information leading to the arrests of five pro-democracy activists who are living in exile. When the British government returned Hong Kong to Chinese control in 1997, Beijing had agreed to allow the territory to retain considerable political autonomy for another 50 years. But more recently China, under the rule of Xi Jinping, has increasingly cracked down on the city's freedoms, sparking mass protests and international condemnation. Hong Kong saw months of protests in 2019 against a bill that would have allowed extradition to the mainland. Hundreds of thousands of people took to the streets, and clashes between the police and protesters became frequent and violent. In September that year, Hong Kong's then leader Carrie Lam withdrew the bill. Two months later, the city's pro-democracy movement made unprecedented gains in its district council elections in a vote that was widely seen as a referendum on the government. The demonstrations continued, spreading to reflect wider demands for democratic reform and an inquiry into alleged police brutality. But a crackdown followed and China introduced the NSL in 2020. Cameron said the NSL is a "clear breach" of the Sino-British joint declaration, and that its continued use is a "demonstration of China breaking its international commitments". In the three years since the NSL took effect, it has targeted any sign of protest, both large and small - from quiet, candlelight vigils to a 2019 protest anthem, to tweets vby dissenting teenagers. At least 100,000 HongKongers have left the city in the past year, for the UK, Australia, Singapore and Canada. — BBC