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Jailed Greenpeace, Pussy Riot members in Russia near freedom

Russia's parliament has voted for an amnesty bill that includes crew members of a Greenpeace ship and jailed members of the Pussy Riot punk band.

Duma votes 446-0 in favour of bill, which mainly concerns first-time offenders, minors, mothers

Russia's parliament has voted for an amnesty bill that includes crew members of a Greenpeace ship and jailed members of the Pussy Riot punk band.

The Duma on Wednesday voted 446-0 in favour of the bill, which mainly concerns first-time offenders, minors and women with small children. The move has been largely viewed as the Kremlin's attempt to soothe criticism of Russia's human rights records ahead of the Winter Olympics in Sochi next year.

The amnesty makes two members of the Pussy Riot band eligible for release and will allow investigators to drop charges against the 30 members of Greenpeace's ship detained in Russia's Arctic in September.

The bill is also expected to release Nadezhda Tolokonnikova and Maria Alekhina, the jailed members of the Pussy Riot punk band who are serving two years in prison on charges of hooliganism for an irreverent protest at Moscow's main cathedral.

Despite the expansion of the bill, it is still drawing criticism because it does not cover former oil tycoon Mikhail Khodorkovsky, who has been widely described as Russia's main political prisoner, and only eight out of 26 defendants who took part in a 2012 protest rally on the Bolotnaya square in Moscow that ended in scuffles between protesters and riot police.

Opposition lawmaker Dmitry Gudkov said the amnesty bill "has buried all hopes of human rights activists and families of political prisoners that their children and family members will be set free."

As soon as Thursday

The amnesty could happen as soon as Thursday, when the bill is expected to be published in the government newspaper. But it allows a six-month period to carry out the amnesty, meaning that some of the prisoners could in theory wait weeks or months before getting released.

Lawyers and families of the Pussy Riot members insist that everyone eligible for the release ought to be allowed to walk free as soon as the bill is published. The two are now slated to be released in March.

"We're hoping that in case the bill gets passed, Nadia and Masha will be released on Thursday," Pyotr Verzilov, Tolokonnikova's husband, told The Associated Press. "There's nothing to stop this."

Greenpeace said in a statement it hopes that the amnesty bill will allow foreign crew members of the Arctic ship to get exit visas and leave Russia. The crew members insist the charges against them were bogus.

"I might soon be going home to my family, but I should never have been charged and jailed in the first place," the ship's captain Peter Willcox said in the statement.