A Russian court has formally charged 17 of the 30 Greenpeace activists with piracy. They were arrested in Russia after staging a protest at an Arctic oil rig. The charges that Greenpeace calls “extreme” carry a maximum penalty of up to 15 years in jail.
"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," Naidoo said.
The proceedings in a court in the northern city of Murmansk were
adjourned on Wednesday evening, but will continue on Thursday.
“We believe the charges absolutely unfounded and illegal. Our
activists had no motive for taking possession of anyone’s
property. There was no crime,” Greenpeace lawyer Mikhail
Kreindlin told Interfax.
The prosecution insists Greenpeace activists “posed a real
threat” to the personal security of staff and property at the
Prirazlomnaya platform and “peaceful” goals do not serve
to justify the activists’ actions.
A Greenpeace vessel arrived at the oil rig in September in order to board it and stage a protest against Arctic drilling.
The ship and 30 people onboard were detained a day later by
Russian border guards.
The activists, who come from 19 different nations, were arrested
and remanded by a court in the city of Murmansk until November
24.
The dubiousness of the allegations was voiced by Russian
President Vladimir Putin, who said he didn’t believe that the
activists were pirates. But he said they violated international
law and could have provoked a serious environmental disaster with
their actions.
‘The uncertainty is driving me crazy’
Meanwhile, rights activists say The Arctic Sunrise jailed crew
members are "close to shock" over their “very
inhumane” conditions.
Greenpeace has published a letter the Dutch campaigner, Faiza
Oulahsen, wrote from her cell, which recounts her experiences in
detail - from initially boarding the Greenpeace icebreaker up
until a few days ago.
Faiza described her cell as being “ice cold and the lights
were on constantly.”
The activist says they are being transported to the FSB office
like animals - in buses, that are like dark, locked up metal
cages.
“Everything is completely against the rules,” Faiza
writes. “The things that the FSB is accusing us of are full of
all of these inaccuracies and are things they are guilty of
themselves. Nothing is certain. You just need someone at the top
to think it and we disappear in the cell.”
Other activists also complain of cold cells, a lack of suitable
clothing and food.
The detainees are struggling to make themselves understood since
virtually none of the prison staff speaks English, the head of a
state-connected regional prisoners' rights watchdog, Irina
Paikacheva was cited as saying by AFP.
"I have no idea how this is going to end, or how long it's
going to take. The uncertainty drives me crazy," Faiza wrote.
At the same time, prosecutors have checked one of the pre-trial detention facilities, where 18 activists are being held, and concluded that there are no violations and that no complains about food and cells have been made. Greenpeace also confirmed earlier that crew members did not complain about conditions.
Meanwhile, Greenpeace supporters rally around the world to
protest against Shell and Gazprom’s planned oil drilling in the
Arctic and the detention of activists in Russia.
On Wednesday, Greenpeace activists chained themselves to pumps at five gas stations in Berlin.
Prior to that on Tuesday, Greenpeace protesters interrupted the
Champions League match against Schalke as they unfurled a banner
protesting against Gazprom, sponsor of both the League and the
Bundesliga club.
Play in the Swiss city of Basel was halted for around five
minutes after four protesters wearing orange boiler suits and
helmets descended slowly on ropes.
The banners read: "Gazprom, don't foul the Arctic" and
"Free the Arctic 30".
The protesters then hauled themselves back on to the roof.
The Prirazlomnaya oil rig, which Greenpeace targeted in
September, was placed on site in August 2011 and has not been put
into commission yet. The owner, Gazprom, initially planned to
launch it in early 2012, but postponed the deadline till the 4th
quarter of 2013. Greenpeace have staged a similar protest at the
rig.
‘Greenpeace activists put lives of others in danger’
The activists created a dangerous situation by climbing the oil rig, former Greenpeace leader Patrick Moore told RT.
“Oil rigs are a very serious operation with big safety issues. You start scaling a rig, people come to try to get you off it, it puts them in danger and so I can certainly understand why they were apprehended and towed away from the site,” Moore said.
Moore believes the activists knowingly and purposefully committed civil disobedience. “I do tend to agree with President Putin that they are not pirates, their intentions were not to loot the rig, but they were still putting people in danger,” he said.
He mentioned that the oil rig in question was designed specifically to make it safer to extract oil. “Greenpeace policy is ridiculous. They live in a dream world where now they are against fossil fuels, against hydro-electric energy, against nuclear energy - which between the three of them supply about 98 percent of the world’s energy. And they seem to think that civilizations can survive on wind and solar alone.”