Subscribe free to our newsletters via your
. GPS News .




ICE WORLD
Greenpeace crew can leave Russia if migration issue fixed: official
by Staff Writers
Moscow (AFP) Nov 23, 2013


Moscow will allow the foreign crew members of Greenpeace ship Arctic Sunrise to leave Russia as soon as they obtain legal status to do so, a high-ranking Kremlin official said Saturday.

"As soon as the issue of how they can leave Russian territory is regulated, I think they will leave," said the Kremlin Chief of Staff Sergei Ivanov, RIA-Novosti agency reported.

"Nobody will hold them," he said.

Interfax news agency reported that the issue hindering the crew members' departure is their lack of Russian visas.

A Greenpeace official said however that local migration officials were not granting transit visas until all charges were lifted against the activists.

A court in Russia's northwestern city Saint-Petersburg this week granted bail to all but one of 30 crew members of the Dutch-flagged ship, which was detained by Russia after several activists attempted to scale a Barents Sea oil rig belonging to Russian company Gazprom in a protest against offshore drilling.

Australian Colin Russel, the ship's radio operator whose case was the first to be heard in a series of court proceedings this week, was denied bail and for now remains in the Saint Petersburg jail.

One of the people to go before the judge Friday, British national Philip Ball, was granted bail but has not walked out of the jail yet due to a technicality, said Greenpeace lawyer Mikhail Kreindlin.

"They don't have visas, they were registered by migration officials in a hotel, but they are free to move around," Kreindlin told AFP.

"Nobody really understands their status," he said, adding that local migration officers told him they would grant transit visas to the foreigners only after all charges are lifted.

The crew is currently charged with hooliganism. They were initially charged with piracy, a heavier crime, but investigators later dropped the piracy charge.

The ship Arctic Sunrise is still detained at port in Russian northern city Murmansk, although a Friday ruling by the International Tribunal for the Law of the Sea, ordered that the vessel and the crew be "released and allowed to leave" Russia upon the posting of a 3.6 million euro bond.

Ivanov said Russia will not react to the ruling.

"The issue will be solved... according to Russian laws, not somebody's political wishes," he said.

.


Related Links
Beyond the Ice Age






Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle








ICE WORLD
Global warming in the Canadian Arctic
Quebec City, Canada (SPX) Nov 22, 2013
Ph.D. student Karita Negandhi and professor Isabelle Laurion from INRS'Eau Terre Environnement Research Centre, in collaboration with other Canadian, U.S., and French researchers, have been studying methane emissions produced by thawing permafrost in the Canadian Arctic. These emissions are greatly underestimated in current climate models. Their findings, published in the journal PLOS ONE, ... read more


ICE WORLD
Impacts of plant invasions become less robust over time

New bale unroller design deemed effective

Researchers test effects of LEDs on leaf lettuce

High tunnel, open-field production systems compared for lettuce, tomato

ICE WORLD
Chaotic physics in ferroelectrics hints at brain-like computing

Nature: Single-atom Bit Forms Smallest Memory in the World

Virtual Toothpick Helps Technologist 'Bake' the Perfect Thin-Film Confection

New way to dissolve semiconductors holds promise for electronics industry

ICE WORLD
Peru boosts defense with tactical aircraft, helos

Algorithms + FA-18 Jet = Vital Testing for SLS Flight Control System

Strathclyde students launch experiment into stratosphere

It's Typhoon vs. Rafale in Emirates jet joust

ICE WORLD
Volvo signs second loan with China Development Bank

France's Renault and Peugeot seen to profit from Iran deal

Nissan says struggling to satisfy China growth

Toyota strikes first-ever hybrid parts sharing deal in China

ICE WORLD
China, US exports help double Italy trade surplus

Foreign investment in China up 5.77% in first 10 months: govt

China, EU begin negotiations on investment pact

Romania's Senate rejects Canadian gold mine

ICE WORLD
Philippines to plant more mangroves in wake of Typhoon Haiyan

Rising concerns over tree pests and diseases

Bait research focused on outsmarting destructive beetle

Landsat Data Yield Best View to Date of Global Forest Losses, Gains

ICE WORLD
Satellites to probe Earth's strange shield

Free access to Copernicus Sentinel satellite data

China launches remote-sensing satellite

Evidence of Destruction in Tacloban, Philippines

ICE WORLD
Graphene nanoribbons for 'reading' DNA

New hologram technology created with tiny nanoantennas

Nano magnets arise at 2-D boundaries

Structure of bacterial nanowire protein hints at secrets of conduction




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2014 - Space Media Network. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement