<p>Hong Kong media mogul Jimmy Lai, one of the city's most vocal Beijing critics, was arrested Monday under a new national security law for colluding with foreign forces, deepening a crackdown on democracy supporters.</p>.<p>"They arrested him at his house at about 7am. Our lawyers are on the way to the police station," Mark Simon, a close aide, told AFP, adding that other members of Lai's media group had also been arrested.</p>.<p>A police source speaking on condition of anonymity told AFP Lai was arrested for colluding with foreign forces -- one of the new national security offences -- and fraud.</p>.<p>Lai owns the Apple Daily newspaper and Next Magazine, two outlets unapologetically pro-democracy and critical of Beijing.</p>.<p>On Twitter, Simon said officers were executing search warrants at both Lai's mansion and his son's house.</p>.<p>Few Hong Kongers generate the level of vitriol from Beijing that Lai does.</p>.<p>For many residents of the restless semi-autonomous city, he is an unlikely hero -- a pugnacious, self-made tabloid owner and the only tycoon willing to criticise Beijing.</p>.<p>But in China's state media he is a "traitor", the biggest "black hand" behind last year's huge pro-democracy protests in Hong Kong and the head of a new "Gang of Four" conspiring with foreign nations to undermine the motherland.</p>.<p>Lai spoke to AFP in mid-June, two weeks before the new security law was imposed on the city.</p>.<p>"I'm prepared for prison," the 72-year-old said. "If it comes, I will have the opportunity to read books I haven't read. The only thing I can do is to be positive."</p>.<p>He described the law as "a death knell for Hong Kong".</p>.<p>"It will supersede or destroy our rule of law and destroy our international financial status," he said.</p>.<p>He also said he feared authorities would come after his journalists.</p>.<p>The security law targets secession, subversion, terrorism and colluding with foreign forces.</p>.<p>It was brought in to quell last year's often violent protests.</p>.<p>Both China and Hong Kong have said it will not affect people's freedoms and only targets a minority.</p>.<p>But its broadly-worded provisions criminalise certain political speech, such as advocating for sanctions, greater autonomy or independence for Hong Kong.</p>.<p>Critics, including many Western nations, believe the law has ended the key liberties and autonomy that Beijing promised Hong Kong could keep after its 1997 handover by Britain.</p>.<p>Lai is no stranger to arrest.</p>.<p>He is already being prosecuted for taking part in last year's protests -- and for defying a police ban to attend a vigil in early June commemorating Beijing's deadly Tiananmen crackdown in 1989.</p>
<p>Hong Kong media mogul Jimmy Lai, one of the city's most vocal Beijing critics, was arrested Monday under a new national security law for colluding with foreign forces, deepening a crackdown on democracy supporters.</p>.<p>"They arrested him at his house at about 7am. Our lawyers are on the way to the police station," Mark Simon, a close aide, told AFP, adding that other members of Lai's media group had also been arrested.</p>.<p>A police source speaking on condition of anonymity told AFP Lai was arrested for colluding with foreign forces -- one of the new national security offences -- and fraud.</p>.<p>Lai owns the Apple Daily newspaper and Next Magazine, two outlets unapologetically pro-democracy and critical of Beijing.</p>.<p>On Twitter, Simon said officers were executing search warrants at both Lai's mansion and his son's house.</p>.<p>Few Hong Kongers generate the level of vitriol from Beijing that Lai does.</p>.<p>For many residents of the restless semi-autonomous city, he is an unlikely hero -- a pugnacious, self-made tabloid owner and the only tycoon willing to criticise Beijing.</p>.<p>But in China's state media he is a "traitor", the biggest "black hand" behind last year's huge pro-democracy protests in Hong Kong and the head of a new "Gang of Four" conspiring with foreign nations to undermine the motherland.</p>.<p>Lai spoke to AFP in mid-June, two weeks before the new security law was imposed on the city.</p>.<p>"I'm prepared for prison," the 72-year-old said. "If it comes, I will have the opportunity to read books I haven't read. The only thing I can do is to be positive."</p>.<p>He described the law as "a death knell for Hong Kong".</p>.<p>"It will supersede or destroy our rule of law and destroy our international financial status," he said.</p>.<p>He also said he feared authorities would come after his journalists.</p>.<p>The security law targets secession, subversion, terrorism and colluding with foreign forces.</p>.<p>It was brought in to quell last year's often violent protests.</p>.<p>Both China and Hong Kong have said it will not affect people's freedoms and only targets a minority.</p>.<p>But its broadly-worded provisions criminalise certain political speech, such as advocating for sanctions, greater autonomy or independence for Hong Kong.</p>.<p>Critics, including many Western nations, believe the law has ended the key liberties and autonomy that Beijing promised Hong Kong could keep after its 1997 handover by Britain.</p>.<p>Lai is no stranger to arrest.</p>.<p>He is already being prosecuted for taking part in last year's protests -- and for defying a police ban to attend a vigil in early June commemorating Beijing's deadly Tiananmen crackdown in 1989.</p>