Piracy charge 
          against arctic activists ‘an assault on peaceful protest’ - Greenpeace
          By GREENPEACE
          October 2, 2013
          AMSTERDAM – The 
          Russian state prosecutor today laid charges of piracy against a 
          Greenpeace activist who protested against oil drilling in the Arctic. 
          A freelance videographer has also been charged with piracy, which 
          carries a maximum 15 year jail sentence. It is an extreme and 
          disproportionate charge. Charges are expected to be brought against 
          other Greenpeace campaigners over the coming hours and days. 
          
          Responding to the news, 
          Greenpeace International executive director KumiNaidoo 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. Any claim that 
          these activists are pirates is as absurd as it is abominable. It is 
          utterly irrational, it is designed to intimidate and silence us, but 
          we will not be cowed.
          “This is now the most 
          serious threat to Greenpeace’s peaceful environmental activism since 
          agents of the French secret service bombed the Rainbow Warrior and 
          killed our colleague Fernando Pereira because we stood against French 
          nuclear weapons testing in the Pacific. Three decades later the 
          activists of the Arctic Sunrise also took a stand, this time against 
          the powerful vested interests of the oil industry, and they could now 
          face the prospect of long periods in a Russian jail. I call on people 
          from across the world, anybody who ever raised their voice in support 
          of something they believe in, and especially the good people of 
          Russia, to come to their aid at this moment and join us in demanding 
          the release of the Arctic 30.
          “The courageous crew of the 
          Greenpeace ship Arctic Sunrise protested at that Gazprom rig because 
          they felt compelled to bear witness to the slow but unrelenting 
          destruction of the Arctic. The ice is retreating, oil companies are 
          moving north to drill for the fuels that are driving that melting, 
          species are at risk, including our own. Thirty men and women, some 
          young, others not-so-young, all with a moral compass, actually did 
          something about it. Just as in years past, the resolve and courage 
          required to win a better future for our children requires personal 
          sacrifice, a sacrifice the Arctic 30 are now making. They made their 
          stand in the interests of us all. Now we must come together and stand 
          with them.”
          The charge has so far been 
          laid against crew member Ana Paula Alminhana from Brazil, and 
          freelance videographer Kieron Bryan from the UK.
          The 28 activists, a 
          freelance photographer and the freelance videographer, were involved 
          in a protest against the Gazprom Arctic drilling platform 
          Prirazlomnaya on September 18th. Two activists tried to climb the side 
          of the platform and hang a banner. Today Greenpeace is releasing 
          photographs of the moment Russian security services abseiled from a 
          helicopter onto the deck of the Arctic Sunrise and seized the ship at 
          gunpoint. The photographs clearly show peaceful activists posing no 
          threat to the Russian authorities.
          “I ask people to look at 
          those photographs and decide if the peaceful campaigners with their 
          arms raised, with guns pointed at their chests, could ever be 
          described as pirates,” said KumiNaidoo.
          Last week President Putin 
          himself scoffed at the notion that the Greenpeace protesters were 
          pirates. He said that "It is absolutely evident that they are, of 
          course, not pirates."
          The number of people 
          worldwide who have written to Russian embassies demanding the release 
          of the activists and freelancers today passed one million. Others 
          calling for the release of the Arctic 30 include Nobel peace prize 
          winner Adolfo Pérez Esquivel, Amnesty International, Human Rights 
          Watch and the actor Ewan McGregor.
          The Captain of the Arctic 
          Sunrise, Peter Willcox - now in a Russian jail - was the Captain of 
          the Rainbow Warrior when it was bombed in 1985.