<p>Russia said today it had dropped the charge of piracy against 30 Greenpeace activists detained while protesting against Arctic drilling, accusing them instead of "hooliganism".<br /></p>.<p>The Investigative Committee, the Russian agency in charge of probing serious crimes, said it had reclassified the crime as hooliganism, which carries a lesser sentence.<br /><br />The crew of Greenpeace's Arctic Sunrise ship, who come from 18 countries including Britain, Australia, Spain and Russia, had been facing up to 15 years in a penal colony if found guilty of piracy.<br /><br />The hooliganism charge -- which was also used against the Pussy Riot punks -- carries a maximum sentence of seven years in a penal colony.<br /><br />Greenpeace today said the charge was still "wildly disproportionate" and called for its activists to be immediately released.<br /><br />Russia charged the crew of the Dutch-flagged ship with piracy early this month after they attempted to scale a state-owned oil platform in a protest against drilling in the Arctic.<br /><br />They are being held in pre-trial detention until November 24 in the northern Russian region of Murmansk.<br /><br />The case has sparked an international outcry with stars such as British actor Jude Law joining vigils outside Russian embassies.<br /><br />The Netherlands has taken Russia to the world's maritime court in a bid to free the crew members, but Moscow said earlier Wednesday it would boycott the hearings before the International Tribunal for the Law of the Sea (ITLOS).<br /><br />The Russian announcement marked another step in an escalating feud between the economic partners that has also witnessed the brief detention of a Russian diplomat in The Hague and Moscow's threat to ban some Dutch imports.<br /><br />Greenpeace's Russian office said in a statement sent to AFP the activists "should be released immediately."<br /><br />"The Arctic 30 are no more hooligans than they were pirates. This is still a wildly disproportionate charge that carries up to seven years in jail," said Greenpeace's Vladimir Chuprov. <br /></p>
<p>Russia said today it had dropped the charge of piracy against 30 Greenpeace activists detained while protesting against Arctic drilling, accusing them instead of "hooliganism".<br /></p>.<p>The Investigative Committee, the Russian agency in charge of probing serious crimes, said it had reclassified the crime as hooliganism, which carries a lesser sentence.<br /><br />The crew of Greenpeace's Arctic Sunrise ship, who come from 18 countries including Britain, Australia, Spain and Russia, had been facing up to 15 years in a penal colony if found guilty of piracy.<br /><br />The hooliganism charge -- which was also used against the Pussy Riot punks -- carries a maximum sentence of seven years in a penal colony.<br /><br />Greenpeace today said the charge was still "wildly disproportionate" and called for its activists to be immediately released.<br /><br />Russia charged the crew of the Dutch-flagged ship with piracy early this month after they attempted to scale a state-owned oil platform in a protest against drilling in the Arctic.<br /><br />They are being held in pre-trial detention until November 24 in the northern Russian region of Murmansk.<br /><br />The case has sparked an international outcry with stars such as British actor Jude Law joining vigils outside Russian embassies.<br /><br />The Netherlands has taken Russia to the world's maritime court in a bid to free the crew members, but Moscow said earlier Wednesday it would boycott the hearings before the International Tribunal for the Law of the Sea (ITLOS).<br /><br />The Russian announcement marked another step in an escalating feud between the economic partners that has also witnessed the brief detention of a Russian diplomat in The Hague and Moscow's threat to ban some Dutch imports.<br /><br />Greenpeace's Russian office said in a statement sent to AFP the activists "should be released immediately."<br /><br />"The Arctic 30 are no more hooligans than they were pirates. This is still a wildly disproportionate charge that carries up to seven years in jail," said Greenpeace's Vladimir Chuprov. <br /></p>