Mr. Bailey's 1st Block IR-GSI Class blog focused on the current events of Europe and Russia
Wednesday, October 2, 2013
Russia oil rig protesters charged with piracy
Four Greenpeace activists and a journalist may face up to 15 years in prison if found guilty.
Last Modified: 02 Oct 2013 11:16
The punishment for piracy may see activists jailed up to 15 years [Reuters]
Russian investigators have charged five Greenpeace
campaigners from several countries with piracy over an open-sea protest
against Arctic oil drilling, the environmental group said, calling the
move an "outrage".
The charge filed on Wednesday dimmed hopes that 25 others detained over would be indicted on a lesser charge.
Piracy by an organised group carries a punishment of between ten to fifteen years.
The accusation came despite President Vladimir Putin's statement last
week that the activists "of course are not pirates." He, however, said
that they did break the law by protesting dangerously close to an oil
rig.
Greenpeace called the charges "extreme and disproportionate."
"This is an outrage and represents nothing less than an assault on
the very principle of peaceful protest," Greenpeace International
executive director Kumi Naidoo said.
Those already charged on Wednesday were Brazil's Ana Paula Alminhana
Maciel, a crew member from Greenpeace's Arctic Sunrise icebreaker,
freelance videographer Kieron Bryan from the UK, Finnish activist Sini
Saarela, who was one of the climbers who attempted to scale an oil rig,
Russian activist Roman Dolgov, and Dima Litvinov, an activist with
Swedish and US citizenship.
Russian investigators accused the activists of piracy after several
of them tried to scale state energy giant
Gazprom's Prirazlomnaya oil
platform in the northern Barents Sea last month.
The group has denied the charges and accuses Russia of illegally
boarding its ship in international waters. The 30 activists from 18
countries are being held in pre-trial detention centres in the cities of
Murmansk and Apatity, which are nearly 2,000km north of Moscow and
above the Arctic Circle. All but four of them are non-Russians.
"Close to shock"
The Arctic Sunrise crew members detained in Russian jails for two
months over their protest are "close to shock" over their conditions, a
rights activist said Tuesday.
They have complained of cold cells and a lack of suitable clothing
and food, Irina Paikacheva, the head of a state-connected regional
prisoners' rights watchdog, told AFP.
"They had never expected that they would face such consequences for their peaceful protest in a democratic state."
The foreign detainees are struggling to make themselves understood
since virtually none of the prison staff speaks English, she added.
The Dutch government has called on Moscow to release the activists immediately and said it was considering legal action.
The arrests have also sparked outrage from Russian and international
rights activists, with Reporters Without Borders saying investigators
were "criminalising both journalists and environmental activists".
No comments:
Post a Comment