Russia charges Greenpeace activists with piracy

Camila SpezialeRussian authorities charged Greenpeace activists from several nations with piracy today over a protest against Arctic oil drilling at a platform owned by the state-controlled energy company Gazprom , the environmental group said.

The piracy charges, which Greenpeace said were absurd, are punishable by up to 15 years in prison.

The federal Investigative Committee said authorities had begun charging 30 people arrested after the protest last month, in which a Greenpeace icebreaker approached the Prirazlomnaya platform and two activists tried to scale the rig – a crucial part of Russia’s effort to mine Arctic resources.

By midday, five people had been charged, Greenpeace said – Brazilian crew member Ana Paula Alminhana, Russian activist Roman Dolgov, Finnish activist Sini Saarela, British freelance videographer Kieron Bryan, and Dima Litvinov, an activist with Swedish and US citizenship.

«It is an extreme and disproportionate charge,» Greenpeace International executive director Kumi Naidoo said.

«A charge of piracy is being laid against men and women whose only crime is to be possessed of a conscience. This is an outrage and represents nothing less than an assault on the very principle of peaceful protest.»

A court in the northern city of Murmansk last week ordered all 30 people from 18 countries who had been aboard the Greenpeace icebreaker Arctic Sunrise to be held in custody for two months pending further investigation.

The Investigative Committee said authorities had begun to charge the activists on Wednesday but gave no details.

The environmental group says the protest was peaceful and posed no threat, and that piracy charges have no merit in international or Russian law.

President Vladimir Putin said last week the protesters were clearly not pirates but they had violated international law.

The Investigative Committee said on Monday peaceful aims would not justify what it has called an «attack» that posed a threat to the platform and its personnel.

Source: Buenos Aires Herald