Permalink: https://media.greenpeace.org/archive/Alexandra-Harris-Released-on-Bail-in-St--Petersburg-27MZIF3ZFZFZ.htmlConceptually similarArctic 30 Activists in St. PetersburgGP0STO55WCompleted★★★★★★Arctic 30 Activists in St. PetersburgGP0STO55XCompleted★★★★Arctic 30 Activists in St. PetersburgGP0STO55YCompleted★★★★★★Arctic 30 Activists in St. PetersburgGP0STO560Completed★★★★★★Arctic 30 Activists in St. PetersburgGP0STO561Completed★★★★★★Alexandra Harris Released on Bail in St. PetersburgGP0STO4LFCompleted★★★★Alexandra Harris Released on Bail in St. PetersburgGP0STO4LGCompleted★★★★Alexandra Harris Released on Bail in St. PetersburgGP0STO4LHCompleted★★★★Alexandra Harris Released on Bail in St. PetersburgGP0STO4LICompleted★★★★View AllGP0STO4LJAlexandra Harris Released on Bail in St. PetersburgGreenpeace International activist Alexandra Harris (from the UK) is released on bail from the SIZO 5 detention centre in St. Petersburg. The Primorskiy Court in St Petersburg granted bail to Alex on Wednesday (20th November) pending the payment of 2 million ruble bail. She has now left the detention centre, but the conditions of her bail are not yet fully known.The 'Arctic 30' (twenty-eight Greenpeace International activists, as well as a freelance photographer and a freelance videographer) face charges of piracy and hooliganism in Russia for a peaceful protest against Arctic oil drilling in the Pechora Sea. Greenpeace International insists that piracy and hooliganism charges are unjustified, and that Russian authorities boarded the Arctic Sunrise illegally in international waters. Several international legal experts have supported that view.Locations:Europe-Russia-Saint PetersburgDate:22 Nov, 2013Credit:© Greenpeace / Maria VasilievaMaximum size:5184px X 3456pxKeywords:Arctic 30 (campaign title)-Court cases-Day-Flowers-Gazprom-Greenpeace activists-Happiness-KWCI (GPI)-Law-Outdoors-Prisoners-Russian Government-Save the Arctic (campaign title)-Two people-WomenShoot:'Arctic 30' in Saint PetersburgThe 'Arctic 30' (twenty-eight Greenpeace International activists, as well as a freelance photographer and a freelance videographer) face charges of piracy and hooliganism in Russia for a peaceful protest against Arctic oil drilling in the Pechora Sea. Greenpeace International insists that piracy and hooliganism charges are unjustified, and that Russian authorities boarded the Arctic Sunrise illegally in international waters. Several international legal experts have supported that view. In this shoot images show some of the Arctic 30 being released on bail.Related Collections:'Arctic 30' Tight Edit Events'Arctic 30' Part 2 - Saint Petersburg and Release on Bail (All Photographers)