Google – AFP, 5 October 2013
Nusa Dua — Australian Foreign Minister Julie Bishop Saturday
expressed concern to Russia about an Australian crew member of a Greenpeace
ship facing a "very serious" piracy charge over an Arctic oil
exploration protest.
Colin Russell is one of 30 activists from the Arctic Sunrise
ship who were detained in Russia and are facing the charge, which can carry a
lengthy jail term, after last month's protest.
After talks with Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Igor
Morgulov on the sidelines of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation forum in
Indonesia's Bali, Bishop said she had raised "Australia's concern about
the case".
She said she asked the minister "that Russian
authorities accord due legal process to Mr Russell and other detainees",
adding that Australia was looking into whether the "very serious
charge" was appropriate.
Piracy by an organised group carries a prison sentence of up
to 15 years in Russia.
Bishop said Australian consular officials had been in touch
with Russell, adding: "I understand he is well, his conditions of
detention are adequate."
A prisoners' rights activist told AFP this week the
detainees were complaining of cold cells, chain-smoking fellow prisoners and
difficulties communicating with guards, hardly any of whom speak English.
The September 18 protest saw several activists scale an oil
platform owned by energy giant Gazprom in the Barents Sea to denounce Russia's
plans to drill in the Arctic.
Russian border guards lowered themselves onto the
Dutch-flagged Arctic Sunrise from a helicopter, locked up the crew and towed
the ship to Murmansk, located nearly 2,000 kilometres (1,200 miles) north of
Moscow.
Russian investigators charged all 30 crew members with
piracy over the protest. They accused the activists of trying to seize property
with threats of violence.
Greenpeace denies the crew members -- who come from 18
different countries including Britain, Russia, New Zealand, Canada and France
-- committed any crime.
Lawyers for the 30, who are being held in Murmansk and the
nearby town of Apatity, have filed appeals against the decision to hold them in
detention.
The Netherlands said Friday it had started legal action to
free the crew members.
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