Environment

Greenpeace activists ‘held at gun point’ in Russian Arctic

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Twenty-five Greenpeace activists are being held at gunpoint after a protest in Russia. The country’s coastguard boarded the activists’ ship in the Barents Sea, as campaigners were planning to hijack a Gazprom oil rig to stop it from drilling.

The siege comes after Greenpeace activists climbed the Shard in London in July to protest against the oil extraction in the Arctic. The 25 activists, including six Britons, are being held on their ship, the Arctic Sunrise, by armed Russian guards during another Arctic drilling protest.

The green group has said that at the time of the incident, their ship was circling Gazprom’s Prirazlomnaya platform from international waters. However, the Russian coastguard’s boarding occurred within the country’s exclusive economic zone (EEZ), which Greenpeace says makes the protest “illegal”.

Greenpeace International executive director Kumi Naidoo said, “This illegal boarding of a peaceful protest ship highlights the extreme lengths that the Russian government will go to to keep Gazprom dangerous Arctic drilling away from public scrutiny.

“We ask President Putin to restrain the coastguard and order them to holster their guns and withdraw. We are a peaceful organisation and our protest has done nothing to warrant this level of aggression.”

The Russian foreign minister accused Greenpeace of “aggressive and provocative behaviour” and said that the activists’ attempt to board the oil rig “threatened people’s lives and could lead to environmental catastrophe in the Arctic with unpredictable consequences”.

Greenpeace has rejected such claims. Ben Ayliffe, head of Greenpeace International’s Arctic oil campaign commented, “The coastguard has boarded our vessels with guns, threatened our activists at gunpoint and fired 11 warning shots across our ship, so who is the real threat to safety here?”

He added, “Drilling for oil here in the Arctic is a grave environmental risk that must be stopped and this is why Greenpeace International came here, taking peaceful action to defend the environment on behalf of the millions of people around the world who are opposed to drilling operations.”

Further reading:

The Arctic: an untouched frontier made vulnerable by greed

Russia and Shell’s dangerous liaison threatens the Arctic region

Greenpeace activists scale London’s Shard in Shell Arctic drilling protest

Oil companies to blame for 55 North Sea leaks, says Greenpeace

US bans Shell from Arctic drilling until safety fears are eliminated

 

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