Greenpeace activist arrives home

Written By Unknown on Kamis, 02 Januari 2014 | 21.29

AUSTRALIAN activist Colin Russell has arrived home saying he has no regrets about his time spent in a Russian jail and that Greenpeace will campaign the "same as ever".

The 59-year-old flew into Hobart on Thursday night after being detained by Russian authorities for three months over a seaborne protest against oil drilling in the Arctic.

With his wife and daughter at his side he told reporters at Hobart Airport that being detained was unexpected and "wasn't in my travel brochure".

Mr Russell, a radio operator, was one of 30 activists arrested and detained in September for protesting against a Russian oil rig operated by Moscow-based energy company Gazprom in the Pechora Sea.

Known as the Arctic 30, the group, made up of 28 Greenpeace activists and two freelance journalists, had been accused of piracy then hooliganism.

The charges were dropped last week after the Russian parliament passed an amnesty law and freed the defendants.

Russian authorities granted Mr Russell an exit visa last week, allowing him to return home.

He said the Greenpeace protest was a peaceful one and the Russian reaction was "probably overdone".

But the arrests and detention would not deter the environmental group, he said.

"I think we'll still campaign the same as ever ... that's what we do.

"I have no regrets about the time in jail .. it's done the job," Mr Russell said.

"It's freedom of speech and I think maybe Russians learnt a bit of a lesson too that people should have the right to freedom of speech."

Mr Russell said the Russian troops who boarded the Greenpeace vessel "weren't messing around".

"It was pretty hair raising, pretty scary when you see people with full balaclavas on and automatic weapons, I'm not used to that of course."

He said he was not harshly treated in the jail he was in but it was run down and not clean and one man there had tuberculosis and AIDs.

Mr Russell said he would have to have blood tests for the disease for the next two years.

He said the Australian government "could have gone into bat a little bit more for me".

"Australia was going to let me go through Russia's due legal process, but it just doesn't exist," he said.

But he did pay tribute to Australian consular officials who kept him informed and supplied him with food and books.

Mr Russell said he wanted to thank everybody in Australia who backed him during his ordeal.

His daughter Madeleine said it was a "huge relief" to have her father back and she was grateful to everyone who had supported them, while his wife Christine said she was proud of what her husband had done.


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