Twenty two people who were aboard Greenpeace’s ship Arctic Sunrise will spend two months in pre-trial detention, a Murmansk court ruled. The ship's crew faces charges of piracy for boarding an Arctic oil rig.
In addition, eight activists are to be held for three days ahead
of a new hearing.
The 30 defendants in the dock include four Russians and
foreigners from 19 countries, including the US and Canada.
Roman Dolgov, an activist and spokesman for Greenpeace Russia,
strongly rejected the charges leveled at him and the group.
“I believe the charge is unlawful and absolutely unfair. There
was certainly no piracy involved,” Dolgov told prosecutors,
adding that he is a marine pollution expert and had nothing to do
with trying to take over the oil rig.
Among the people detained is the Arctic Sunrise captain Pete
Willcox, and Russian photographer Denis Sinyakov, who was
contracted to document the environmental organization's
activism.
"The criminal activity I am blamed for is called journalism.I
will keep doing it," said the photographer.
The judge ruled that the defendants posed a flight risk.
Investigative Committee spokesman Vladimir Markin said the Arctic
Sunrise crewmembers may have their pre-trial detention commuted
to a period of restricted liberty, to be decided by the court.
“It is important to note that, after sentencing, and having
established the levels of responsibility and involvement of each
of the attackers, it is possible that the court will rule on
changing the period of pre-trial detention to a milder one that
may not involve incarceration," Markin said.
Greenpeace has strongly condemned the judge's ruling.
"The Russian government feels it can bully environmental
activists without any fear of consequence," Kumi Naidoo,
Greenpeace's Executive Director posted on his Twitter feed.
"We call on people in Russia and around the world to stand
with our activists and defend their right to peaceful
protest."
I say, they are jailing our activists because they fear what peaceful activism can accomplish. @gp_sunrise@Greenpeace
— Kumi Naidoo (@kuminaidoo) September 26, 2013
The group has gathered over 500,000 signatures for an online
petition to release the Arctic Sunrise crew.
Journalists are staging a demonstration in Moscow support of
Sinyakov on Thursday afternoon, and on Friday two leading liberal
Russian media outlets will use black screens instead of photos as
a gesture of solidarity.
The Greenpeace ship approached the oil rig on Sept. 18, despite
orders from the Russian Border Guard Service not to do so. Two
Greenpeace activists scaled the rig and were preparing to stay
there for several days.
The next day Border Guard troops boarded both the rig and the
activists’ ship, Arctic Sunrise, detaining all 30 people on
board. They later towed the vessel to the Russian port of
Murmansk.
The Greenpeace activists are currently facing piracy charges,
Russia’s Investigative Committee announced Tuesday.
Russian President Vladimir Putin has declared that the defendants were “obviously not
pirates,” but added that technically the charge was valid, as
they were trying to forcefully board and take over the rig, which
is a violation of international law.