A total of six crewmembers of Greenpeace's Arctic Sunrise ship will be released after two months in detention, but still face trial on charges that risk several years in jail.
Ana Paula Maciel of Brazil, New Zealander David John Haussmann and Argentina's Miguel Hernan Perez Orsi will be freed pending payment of a two-million-ruble (USD 61,400) bail, Greenpeace said, citing the decision of a Saint Petersburg court.
Freelance photographer Denis Sinyakov, spokesman Andrei Allakhverdov and Greenpeace ship doctor Yekaterina Zaspa also need to post bail of two million rubles to be released.
A Greenpeace spokeswoman said it remained unclear what motivated the judge to order the extension to the Australian's detention.
"It remains a mystery to us," Violetta Ryabko told AFP.
She said the group had collected enough money to ask the courts to release all 30 activists on bail of two million rubles each.
"We still have no idea what conditions our friends will endure when they are released from jail, whether they will be held under house arrest or even allowed outside."
Yesterday, pre-trial detention was extended until February 24 for Russell, a 59-year-old Australian.
Naidoo said the group remained "baffled and heartbroken that our colleague Colin was refused bail and sent back to prison for three months."
The ruling means he may remain in jail through the Winter Olympics that Russia is hosting in Sochi on February 7-23 next year.
Appearing in court yesterday, the 31-year-old campaigner held a number of posters reading: "I love Russia but let me go home" and "Save the Arctic.
