Fortunately common sense eventually prevailed. The charges were lowered, then dropped; the International Tribunal for the Law of the Sea ordered the ship's return, and after more tiresome Russian bluster eventually the crew was released on bail and the ship returned. Turns out maybe they weren't pirates after all.
Now, two years on, the Permanent Court of Arbitration has ordered Russia to pay compensation for seizing the Arctic Sunrise:
Of course Russia, being Russia, claims it does not recognize the court's authority (even though Russia is party to the Convention for Pacific Settlement of International Disputes of 1907).Reuters wrote:A court in the Netherlands has ordered Russia to pay compensation for seizing the Greenpeace ship Arctic Sunrise during a protest against an offshore oil platform two years ago, a ruling which Moscow dismissed as lacking legal authority.
The Permanent Court of Arbitration, which resolves disputes between states, said the decision was taken unanimously on Aug. 14, but it was not published until late Monday.
It found that by arresting and seizing the Arctic Sunrise and its crew of 30, without the consent of the Netherlands, Russia had breached its legal obligations.
The case has added to already strained diplomatic relations between Russia and the Netherlands, which came to a head over the July 17, 2014 downing of Malaysia Airlines flight MH17 over eastern Ukraine.
In the Arctic Sunrise case, the Netherlands is entitled to compensation with interest for costs and damages, the court found. The amount was to be set at another hearing.
Considering what's transpired since 2013 one suspects sensible folk didn't exactly require any further evidence to be convinced of the Russian government's piratical hooliganism and general farcical awfulness, but there it is anyway.