Russian court releases Greenpeace ship doctor on bail: Greenpeace
SAINT PETERSBURG - Agence France-Presse
Supporters of Greenpeace light candles against the detention in Russia of 30 activists in front of the Fine Arts palace in Mexico City on November 16, 2013. AFP photo
A court in Russia's second city of Saint Petersburg on Monday released on bail one of the 30 Greenpeace crewmembers arrested for an Arctic protest, the first of the activists to be freed, the group said.Yekaterina Zaspa, a Russian doctor with Greenpeace's Arctic Sunrise icebreaker, was released on bail of two million rubles ($61,400, 45,500 euros), the group said, citing the ruling of Saint Petersburg's Kalininsky court.
Earlier on Monday, another Saint Petersburg court extended the pre-trial detention of Australian activist Colin Russell until February 24, meaning he could remain in jail until the 2014 Winter Olympic Games in Sochi end on February 23.
The two courts were scheduled to rule on the detention of several more activists and freelance journalists but some of the hearings were later postponed until later this week.
The 30 activists from 18 countries were put in pre-trial jail in September after Russian security forces seized their ship at gunpoint following an open-sea protest against Arctic oil drilling.
They were first charged with piracy, which carries a maximum sentence of 15 years, but the charges were later changed to hooliganism, which carries a sentence of up to seven years.