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Paul McCartney Asks Putin to Release Greenpeace Activists

© RIA Novosti . Sergei Guneev / Go to the mediabankVladimir Putin and Paul McCartney during their meeting in May 2003 (archive)
Vladimir Putin and Paul McCartney during their meeting in May 2003 (archive) - Sputnik International
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Veteran British musician Paul McCartney has appealed to Russian President Vladimir Putin to release Greenpeace activists jailed after mounting an abortive protest against oil drilling in the Arctic Sea.

MOSCOW, November 14 (RIA Novosti) – Veteran British musician Paul McCartney has appealed to Russian President Vladimir Putin to release Greenpeace activists jailed after mounting an abortive protest against oil drilling in the Arctic Sea.

Beatles founder McCartney asked Putin to reunite the 28 activists and the two journalists accompanying them with their families in a letter posted Thursday to his official website.

“Vladimir, millions of people in dozens of countries would be hugely grateful if you were to intervene to bring about an end to this affair,” McCartney wrote in the letter, dated October 14.

The Greenpeace group was moved this week to three separate detention facilities in St. Petersburg after spending almost two months in jail in the Arctic port city of Murmansk.

They were detained in September after attempting to scale the oil platform of an affiliate of Russia’s state-controlled energy giant Gazprom.

All 30 were originally accused of piracy, but investigators later downgraded the charge to hooliganism, a charge punishable by up to seven years in prison.

McCartney, who is an outspoken animal rights activist, said that the protest was peaceful and not motivated by anti-Russian sentiment.

He referenced the 1968 Beatles hit “Back in the USSR” in his plea for Putin’s clemency toward the Greenpeace activists.

“’Been away so long I hardly knew the place, gee it’s good to be back home,’” McCartney wrote. “Could you make that come true for the Greenpeace prisoners?”

McCartney said in his website post on Thursday that he has yet to receive a reply from the Russian leader.

Putin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told RIA Novosti that the Kremlin has not received the letter.

A court has ordered the Greenpeace group to remain in custody pending a hearing on November 24.

 

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