Russian president should be ‘detained’ if he visits South Africa for BRICS summit in August, party says.
Russia has yet to confirm whether Vladimir Putin will attend the BRICS summit in person | Ozan Kose/AFP via Getty Images
BY ELENA GIORDANO AND NICOLAS CAMUT
MAY 30, 2023
The last
time an accused war criminal visited South Africa, he had to cut his visit
short or risk being arrested. Now, the South African opposition wants to do the
same thing to Vladimir Putin.
South
Africa’s leading opposition party, the Democratic Alliance (DA), said Tuesday
it had taken legal action to force the government to arrest Putin if the
Russian president were to visit the country.
Putin is
currently under an international arrest warrant, issued by the
International Criminal Court (ICC) in The Hague in March, over the forced
deportation of Ukrainian children to Russia as part of Moscow’s full-scale
invasion.
The
DA has now launched a court application requesting Putin be “detained and
surrendered” to the ICC if he were to arrive in South Africa to attend a BRICS
summit in August, the party said in a
statement.
“The DA
is seeking this declaratory order to ensure that there is no legal ambiguity
relating to the procedure to be followed, and the obligations placed upon the
state, should President Putin set foot in South Africa,” DA Shadow Justice
Minister Glynnis Breytenbach said in the party’s statement.
South
Africa will host a summit of
heads of state from BRICS countries (Brazil, Russia, India, China and South
Africa) on August 22-24. As a signatory of the ICC, it would in theory be duty
bound to arrest Putin if he visited the country.
In 2015,
the South African government allowed Sudanese
then-President Omar al-Bashir to leave the country after he had visited
Pretoria for an African Union Summit, despite two pending warrants from the ICC
for alleged genocide and war crimes in Darfur.
For now,
Russia has yet to confirm whether Putin, who has largely avoided international
travel since the beginning of the war, will attend the summit in person.
On
Tuesday, Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said that Russia
would “take part in this summit at the proper level,” according to Russian
state newswire Ria Novosti.
Earlier
Tuesday, the South African foreign ministry said it was granting immunity to
BRICS meeting participants, saying that it was “standard” procedure for a country
hosting an international summit.
“These
immunities do not override any warrant that may have been issued by any
international tribunal against any attendee of the conference,” the
ministry said in a
statement.
https://www.politico.eu/article/vladimir-putin-south-africa-opposition-government-brics/
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