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Canadian Greenpeace activist gets bail

Video: Canadian Arctic 30 member Paul Ruzycki appears in court in St Petersburg before being granted bail.

A Greenpeace spokesman says a Canadian activist who was among 30 arrested during a protest in September has been granted bail by a Russian court.

Spencer Tripp says Paul Ruzycki of Port Colborne, Ont., one of two Canadians being held in Russia, was granted bail today.

The Primorsky court in St. Petersburg set bail at two million rubles (US$61,500) each for the seven Greenpeace activists granted bail Tuesday.

READ MORE: Russia drops piracy charges against Greenpeace activists

The court said they will be released if the bail is paid within the next four days. Greenpeace said it would make money available as soon as possible.

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Ruzycki and Alexandre Paul of Montreal are among the activists awaiting trial for taking part in a demonstration outside a Russian oil rig back in September.

His sister, Patti Ruzycki Stirling, says she and her brother’s supporters are “over the moon” to hear the news but they are still waiting to learn what his bail conditions will be.

VIDEO:Greenpeace activists back in Russian court (Nov 17)

She says they have not yet been able to speak to Ruzycki because of strict control by Russian authorities, but are looking forward to that happening soon.

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“Everyone is feeling buoyed that we’re moving in a positive direction and the least that we think will happen is we should be able to very quickly have a conversation with Paul and let him know how much is going on here in Canada on his behalf,” she said.

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READ MORE: Canadian Greenpeace detainees moved to new Russian jail

Tripp says Paul, the Canadian from Montreal, is scheduled for a detention hearing on Thursday. Both Tripp and Stirling were in Toronto on Tuesday when the news about Ruzycki became known.

Ruzycki, along with six other Greenpeace protesters from Argentina, Brazil, Italy, New Zealand and Poland, are the first of the foreign activists eligible for release from jail while awaiting trial.

One of them, Miguel Orsi of Argentina, clutched a photograph of his baby daughter and cried upon hearing the judge’s decision.

MORE: Russia to release 4 foreign Greenpeace activists

Judges in Greenpeace hearings had previously agreed with prosecutors that the foreign activists in the case were a flight risk, but the Primorsky court did not say whether the seven could leave Russia while on bail.

No trial dates have been set.

VIDEO: New footage from boarding of Greenpeace ship by Russian security agents (Nov 8)

Thirty people aboard a Greenpeace ship were detained in Russia’s Arctic in September for a protest outside a floating oil rig and have been in custody since. The activists were initially charged with piracy, but investigators later said they were bringing hooliganism charges and that piracy would be dropped. People convicted of hooliganism are normally subject to fines, not prison sentences.

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The Primorsky court refused to release an Australian activist on Monday, while another St. Petersburg court granted bail to three Russians aboard the ship, including prominent photographer Denis Sinyakov.

READ MORE: Family of Canadian Greenpeace activist charged in Russia speaks out

Nineteen other crew members are expecting court rulings on their detentions.

Former Beatle Paul McCartney had urged President Vladimir Putin to release all 30 of the detainees.

– with files from The Canadian Press.

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