Russia Lets Greenpeace Activists Leave

7 of 30 people detained are issued visas
By Newser Editors and Wire Services
Posted Dec 26, 2013 12:39 PM CST
Russia Lets Greenpeace Activists Leave
Greenpeace International activist Anthony Perrett shows his passport with permission to leave Russia, near the Federal Migration Service in St. Petersburg, Russia, Thursday, Dec. 26, 2013.   (Dmitry Lovetsky)

Russian authorities today issued visas to seven of 30 members of a Greenpeace ship crew that allow the protesters to leave the country. The move comes after Moscow dropped criminal charges against them over a protest outside an Arctic oil rig. Greenpeace said other foreign members of the crew were expected to get their exit visas soon. The 30 people were arrested in September following a protest outside a Russian oil rig in the Arctic and spent two months in jail before they were granted bail in November.

Hooliganism charges against the crew were later dropped after Russia's parliament passed an amnesty law that was seen as an attempt by the Kremlin to assuage the criticism of Russia's human rights record before the Sochi Winter Olympics. Greenpeace said Anthony Perrett of Britain was the first to get the visa in his passport today. "This was the final step," Perrett said. "I'll be leaving for home in Wales as soon as possible now, extremely proud of what I did three months ago. We took peaceful action to defend a part of the world that is the heartbeat of our climate." (More Greenpeace stories.)

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