Swiss Greenpeace activist Marco Weber and 13 other “Arctic 30” protesters have received official permission to leave Russia, Greenpeace told swissinfo.ch on Thursday.
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Weber, along with all but one of the members of the so-called “Arctic 30” group, was informed on Wednesday that all charges against them were being dropped in connection with a decree by the Russian Parliament, which approved amnesty for thousands of prisoners last week.
The Arctic 30 – 28 Greenpeace International activists and two freelance journalists – were arrested following a protest at a Gazprom-operated Arctic oil platform in September.
They were initially held in the northern city of Murmansk accused of piracy, but were subsequently transferred to St Petersburg. The charges were downgraded to hooliganism, which carries a maximum term of seven years. The group were later released on bail but were unable to leave the country.
A Greenpeace spokesman told swissinfo that the activists who had received visas “will depart from Russia in [the] coming days”.
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Greenpeace activist should be home soon
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The only remaining hurdle for the foreign activists is getting permission to leave the country. Reporting the news, Greenpeace said they had already applied for exit visas. A Greenpeace spokesman in St Petersburg confirmed to Swiss public radio that they were certain Weber would soon be able to leave, although it was not possible to give a…
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Yves Zenger, Greenpeace Switzerland spokesman, confirmed the move on Friday, which had also been announced on Twitter. Weber, along with fellow protesters, are being looked after by a Greenpeace team in St Petersburg. But Zenger told the Swiss news agency that he did not know under what conditions Weber had been allowed to go free:…
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In total, 30 protestors were arrested on September 18 after launching a protest on the Prirazlomnoye oil platform, run by the Russian state-owned Gazprom, from aboard Greenpeace’s “Arctic Sunrise” vessel. According to Greenpeace Switzerland, the 28-year-old Weber was granted bail Wednesday upon payment of two million Russian roubles, or CHF55,000. However, he and the other…
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