Montreal Gazette

Russia charges Greenpeace activists with hooliganis­m

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MOSCOW — Russia’s main investigat­ive agency said Wednesday that it has dropped piracy charges against jailed Greenpeace activists, including two Canadians, and charged them instead with hooliganis­m.

The news brought little comfort to anxious family members back home, since the new charges still carry stiff prison sentences of up to seven years.

But Patti Ruzycki Stirling, whose brother Paul Ruzycki was serving as first mate aboard the Greenpeace ship Arctic Sunrise when it was seized last month, said the decision still represents progress from the Russian government.

Ruzycki, fellow Canadian Alexandre Paul of Montreal and 28 other activists were originally facing prison terms of up to 15 years under the original piracy charges.

“It’s the first step in the right direction, the fact that they’ve come to their senses and realized that piracy is lunacy, that they had no grounds for that,” she said in a telephone interview from her home in Port Colborne, Ont. Greenpeace took a harder line, saying their crew mem- bers were arrested while travelling in internatio­nal waters and should not be behind bars at all.

Christy Ferguson, Arctic campaign co-ordinator with Greenpeace Canada, called the new charges “wildly disproport­ionate.”

“Hooliganis­m carries up to seven years in prison for what was still a peaceful protest being made in the public interest,” she said.

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