Yahoo – AFP,
9 Aug 2014
![]() |
Greenpeace's
ice breaker "Arctic Sunrise" docks in the harbour of Beverwijk
on
August 9, 2014, after returning from Murmansk (AFP Photo/Remko De Waal)
|
Amsterdam
(AFP) - Greenpeace's Arctic Sunrise ship arrived home to a warm welcome in The
Netherlands on Saturday, almost a year after it was seized by Russia during a
protest against Arctic oil drilling.
"It's
great to have her back," veteran Greenpeace skipper Pete Willcox, who
captained the ship at the time of the seizure, told AFP by telephone.
"We
were missing a big member of our family for many months," he said.
![]() |
Greenpeace's
ice breaker "Arctic Sunrise"
enters its homeport in Amsterdam on
August 9, 2014, after returning from
Murmansk (AFP Photo/Remko De Waal)
|
Russian
commandoes seized the Dutch-flagged Arctic Sunrise in September 2013 and
detained 30 Greenpeace activists and journalists after a protest at an offshore
oil rig owned by Russian state oil giant Gazprom.
Russia
released the ship in June and it then took around a month to get it seaworthy
for the trip back to The Netherlands, with Greenpeace saying equipment
including navigation and communication aids "disappeared or had been
severely damaged".
The
activists, including four Russians, were arrested after two campaigners
attempted to scale the giant Prirazlomnaya offshore platform, which
environmentalists warned poses a threat to the pristine Arctic ecology.
Originally
facing a charge of piracy, the so-called "Arctic 30" were later
targeted with less severe hooliganism accusations.
They were
detained for around two months before being bailed and then benefitting from a
Kremlin-backed amnesty.
Greenpeace
is suing Russia before the European Court of Human Rights for what it says was
the illegal detention of its activists, arguing that it breached their right to
freedom of expression.
The Arctic
Sunrise meanwhile had been towed to the Arctic port of Murmansk in northwestern
Russia where it was detained.
It finally
left Murmansk just over a week ago after a Greenpeace crew worked around the
clock to repair some of the damage done to the ship.
![]() |
A woman
holds a Greenpeace flag and waves as Greenpeace's Dutch-flagged
Artic Sunrise
ship returns to the Netherlands in IJmuiden harbour on August 9,
2014 (AFP
Photo/Remko De Waal)
|
"Once
welcomed in Amsterdam, the Arctic Sunrise will head straight for the shipyard
for much-needed repairs," Greenpeace said in a statement.
"We
expect to get a damage estimate within the next two weeks," the
environmental group added.
"The
idea is to re-install the electronics and get her going again," said
Willcox, who was also in charge of the environmental group's Rainbow Warrior
ship when French agents sank it in Auckland harbour in 1985 as it prepared to
lead anti-nuclear protests.
"I
think she'll be back out campaigning in about a month, maybe six weeks,"
Willcox said.
After the
ship arrived in Beverwijk port on Saturday, more than half of the Arctic 30 got
on board for the festive entry into nearby Amsterdam harbour.
They drank
a ceremonial cup of tea made in a samovar, a Russian teapot that was a gift
from Russian supporters, Greenpeace said.
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