This
story illustrates the insanity of humanity in its race to the bottom
as it seeks to exploit the riches of the Arctic as the polar ice cap
melts. As the world warms add another (reversible) feedback by
burning yet more of the black stuff.
Two New Zealanders were amongst the arrested
Two New Zealanders were amongst the arrested
We
have to be reminded in the midst of anti-Russian hysteria that Lucy
Lawless and other Greenpeace activists were arrested in New
Zealand for a similar protest.
The
bigger story behind this is given by Prof. Chossudovsky below.
Russian
Court remands Greenpeace activists over piracy claims
A
Russian court has remanded 20 activists from a Greenpeace ship in
custody for two months for allegedly trying to seize an oil platform.
BBC,
26
September, 2013
Eight
others were remanded until Sunday while the fate of two remaining
activists was still being decided late into Thursday night.
The
activists - who hail from a total of 18 countries - are being held
pending a "piracy" inquiry.
Greenpeace
says the activists were staging a legal, peaceful protest.
Coastguards
arrested them on suspicion of piracy after two scaled an offshore
drilling platform.
President
Vladimir Putin said that the activists from 18 countries were clearly
"not pirates" but had broken international law.
The
BBC's Daniel Sandford: "This is the first time that Greenpeace
have found themselves at the criminal end of the piracy law"
The
charge of piracy carries a prison term of up to 15 years in Russia.
Vladimir
Markin, spokesman for Russia's Investigative Committee - its
equivalent of the FBI - said there was a possibility that the remand
orders would be lifted early as investigators clarify what roles
those detained played in the protest.
Rainbow
Warrior veteran
Under
Russian law the prosecution can ask a judge to detain people pending
further investigation.
Denis
Sinyakov, a Russian freelance photographer, and Greenpeace spokesman
Roman Dolgov were the first to be remanded.
Photos
showed Mr Sinyakov, whose photographs of the arrest have been used by
Reuters among others, inside a metal cage, still wearing handcuffs,
in a room of Murmansk's Lenin district court.
A
total of six detained activists are British, four are Russian, two
each come from Argentina, Canada, the Netherlands and New Zealand.
The
captain, Peter Willcox, is an American and other detainees come from
Australia, Italy, Brazil, Finland, Denmark, Switzerland, Ukraine,
Turkey, Sweden, Poland and France, said
Greenpeace on a page of live updates.
The
court's decisions were met with dismay among journalists and
photographers in Russia. Several journalists reportedly picketed the
Moscow headquarters of the Investigative Committee.
The
30 activists were being heard in groups, in six different rooms of
the courthouse.
Dmitry
Artamonov, a Greenpeace co-ordinator, told the Associated Press that
the charges were "absurd". "There can be no other
decision except for the release of all the people, including the crew
members and all passengers," he said.
But
Gazprom spokesman Sergei Kupriyanov reportedly told the Moscow Echo
on Thursday that Greenpeace had acted in "an absolutely illegal
way".
Greenpeace
says that all of the activists have now been questioned in the
presence of lawyers.
Sue
Turner, mother of UK detainee Iain Rogers, told BBC News on Thursday
she had not heard from her son since Monday.
"[Iain]
was doing a job and he didn't cause any damage. It's a very, very
worrying time."
Skirmish
The
drama began a week ago, when two activists successfully climbed on to
the side of a platform operated by Gazprom, Russia's state gas
monopoly.
They
were detained after a short skirmish in inflatable dinghies in which
armed Russian FSB officers in balaclavas fired warning shots into the
water.
The
ship, the Arctic Sunrise, with all its crew was then towed to
Murmansk.
Russia
views its huge fossil fuel deposits under the Arctic as vital to its
economic future, which is why it takes any threat to their
exploitation very seriously, the BBC's Daniel Sandford reports from
Moscow.
This
is the version of events from RT
Greenpeace activists
detained in Arctic 'piracy'
case
Here
is the bigger picture from Michel Chossudovsky on RT
Heat over Arctic: 'Oil & gas may fuel militarization of the region'
As world
powers team up to secure the ecology in the Arctic, the rivalry over
its rich oil and gas resources is heating up. Michel Chossudovsky
from the Center for Research on Globalisation explains that the
battle for the North Pole is high on the global military agenda.
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