Russia charges 30 with piracy in Greenpeace protest
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
- 30 were detained after a protest at a Gazprom oil platform in the Barents Sea
- Greenpeace says two activists tried to hang a banner from a rig
- Russia: The action endangered lives, and could have led to an environmental disaster
- The activists are "accused of an imaginary offense," a Greenpeace official says
The charging began
Wednesday and finished Thursday. If convicted, the 28 activists and two
freelance journalists could be sentenced to up to 15 years in prison.
None of the 30, who hail from at least 18 countries, pleaded guilty, the committee said.
The defendants include
Americans Peter Wilcox, who is the captain of the Arctic Sunrise, and
Dmitry Litvinov, who Greenpeace says also holds Swedish citizenship.
Greenpeace defies, Russians tow boat
2012: Russia's Arctic oil ambitions
They were arrested after
two of the activists left the Arctic Sunrise and tried to climb the side
of an oil platform owned by the Russian energy giant Gazprom in the
Barents Sea on September 18.
The Russian coast guard
detained the pair and the rest of the Arctic Sunrise's crew, and towed
the ship to the northwestern Russian port city of Murmansk.
Greenpeace said the two
activists were trying to hang a banner from the side of the rig in what
the group called a peaceful protest against the "slow but unrelenting
destruction of the Arctic."
But Russian authorities
accuse them of trying to commandeer the platform. The authorities and
Gazprom also say the activists endangered the lives of the company's
employees and that their action could have led to an environmental
disaster.
Lawyers acting on Greenpeace's behalf have filed appeals in court seeking the defendants' release, Greenpeace said Thursday.
"Our activists have been
charged with a crime that did not happen. They are accused of an
imaginary offense," Greenpeace International Executive Director Kumi
Naidoo said Thursday. "There can be no doubt about why the charge of
piracy has been brought and the legal hammer wielded.
"An effort is under way
to intimidate us, but our peaceful, passionate campaign against Gazprom
and all other Arctic drillers will not be silenced."
The charge of piracy is "over the top," Phil Radford, executive director of Greenpeace USA, told CNN earlier this week.
"I think they (Russian
prosecutors) will take it all the way to trial," Radford said. "I think
Gazprom is using its political muscle to have the courts really crack
down on these peaceful protesters. It's a serious and overblown charge.
"They need to have the
piracy charge because it's the only way they can save face from
illegally arresting these activists and journalists."
Russian President
Vladimir Putin has indicated he does not consider the protesters
pirates, but Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev, quoted in the Russian
media, said Wednesday: "Environmental concerns cannot be used as a cloak
for illegal acts no matter what lofty considerations such acts are
based on. They cannot manifest themselves in illegal methods or methods
that are eventually unsafe for people and technological facilities."
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