Environment
Two Greenpeace activists held in Russia formally charged with piracy
A crewmember from Brazil and a British videographer face between 10 and 15 years in jail as part of a Greenpeace group that protested against oil drilling in the Arctic.
Similar charges are expected to be brought against another 14 of the 30 activists who were stopped by the Russian coastguard while planning to hijack an oil rig in the Barents Sea in September. This is despite Russian president Vladimir Putin saying that they were clearly “not pirates”.
Executive director of Greenpeace International Kumi Naidoo said that seemingly the activists’ only crime was to possess a conscience.
“This is an outrage and represents nothing less than an assault on the very principle of peaceful protest”, he said.
“Any claim that these activists are pirates is as absurd as it is abominable. It is utterly irrational, it is designed to intimidate and silence us, but we will not be cowed.”
The offence means that the campaigners that were onboard of the Arctic Sunrise can face from 10 to 15 years in prison. So far, the only two to be officially charged have been the Brazilian activist Ana Paula Alminhana and the British videographer Kieron Bryan, whose parents told the Guardian they were “extremely worried” about their son.
Naidoo called it “the most serious threat to Greenpeace’s peaceful environmental activism” since the death of Fernando Pereira during the protests against French nuclear weapons testing in the Pacific.
“The courageous crew of the Greenpeace ship Arctic Sunrise protested at that Gazprom rig because they felt compelled to bear witness to the slow but unrelenting destruction of the Arctic”, Naidoo added.
“The ice is retreating, oil companies are moving north to drill for the fuels that are driving that melting, species are at risk, including our own.”
Meanwhile, a Murmansk court ruled in September that 22 activists would be held in jail for two months without being sentenced.
Further reading:
Greenpeace activists to spend two months in Russian jail without being charged
Vladimir Putin: Greenpeace Arctic activists ‘not pirates’
Hijacked Greenpeace Arctic crew accused of ‘piracy’ by Russia
Greenpeace activists ‘held at gun point’ in Russian Arctic
The Arctic: an untouched frontier made vulnerable by greed