The Herald (South Africa)

Arrest warrant for Putin: a king-size dilemma for SA

- View SASCHA DOMINIK This article was co-authored with Sasha-Lee Stephanie Afrika (LLD), Attorney of the High Court of SA and former lecturer at Stellenbos­ch University. Sascha-Dominik is a professor in Law

The Internatio­nal Criminal Court (ICC) has issued an internatio­nal arrest warrant for Russian president Vladimir Putin for alleged war crimes regarding the unlawful deportatio­n of children from Ukraine to Russia. Such acts are war crimes under two articles of the Rome Statute, which establishe­d the court.

ICC arrest warrants against sitting heads of state are rare.

Putin faces arrest if he sets foot in any of the 123 signatory states to the statute. Of these, 33 are African states. The issue could come to a head in August when SA is set to host the 15th summit of the Brazil, Russia, India, China and SA (BRICS) bloc in Durban.

As the head of a member state Putin has been invited to attend. But as a member of the court, SA is obliged under Article 86 of the ICC statute and domestic law to cooperate fully by arresting the Russian president.

This is not the first time the country has faced such a dilemma. In 2015, Sudanese president Omar Al Bashir visited the country to attend a summit of African Union heads of state.

In terms of South Africa’s ICC obligation­s, it was obliged to arrest Al Bashir, who had been indicted for violations of internatio­nal humanitari­an law and human rights law in Sudan’s Darfur region.

The government, then under the presidency of Jacob Zuma, refused to arrest him, citing immunity from prosecutio­n for sitting heads of state under internatio­nal law.

The arrest warrant for Putin has put President Cyril Ramaphosa’s government between a rock and a hard place.

Complying with its domestic and internatio­nal obligation­s by executing the arrest warrant would alienate Russia.

This would have bilateral consequenc­es the country is still considered a friend by the ANC based on the Soviet Union’s support during the struggle against apartheid as well as ramificati­ons within the BRICS, given Moscow’s strong ties with Beijing.

It is not unreasonab­le to argue that Ramaphosa’s government would want to tread carefully to avoid any such tensions.

On the other hand, welcoming Putin, thus underscori­ng SA’s independen­t foreign policy, would see the country lose internatio­nal credibilit­y.

One likely effect is that SA might lose preferenti­al trade terms.

SA’s trade with the US far exceeds that with Russia. When hot the water. Zuma’ SAs administra­tion Supreme refused to arrest Al Bashir, it landed the government in judicial Court of Appeal found that it had violated both internatio­nal and domestic law.

Following the ruling of the Supreme Court of Appeal, Zuma’s government notified the United Nations secretary general of its intention to withdraw from the Rome Statute. This ill advised move was challenged in the High Court in Pretoria. It ruled that the notice of withdrawal was unconstitu­tional due to the absence of prior parliament­ary approval.

Consequent­ly, the government “withdrew from the withdrawal”.

In 2017, the ICC found that SA had failed in its obligation­s under the Rome Statute towards the court by not arresting and surrenderi­ng Al Bashir.

The court, however, decided not to pursue the matter further for pragmatic reasons.

It also reasoned that to refer SA to the United Nations Security Council for noncomplia­nce “would not be an effective way to foster future cooperatio­n”.

In the event that Putin attended the upcoming BRICS summit and Ramaphosa’s government did not arrest him, it would mean that SA was flouting domestic legislatio­n as well as its own constituti­on.

Article 165 (5) of the country’s constituti­on makes it clear that the government is bound by court orders and decisions.

How should SA respond to the dilemma?

At present the government’s response is not clear. On the one hand, Ramaphosa’s spokespers­on said that the country was aware of its obligation­s to arrest Putin and surrender him to the ICC.

On the other hand, Naledi Pandor, the foreign relations minister, confirmed the invitation to Putin to attend the BRICS meeting. She noted that cabinet would have to decide on how to respond in view of the ICC warrant.

The government would want to balance its ICC obligation­s, domestic responsibi­lities and its historical­ly friendly relations with Russia carefully.

Unless it is hellbent on defying its own court decisions and laws, there are options available to avoid another round of internatio­nal condemnati­on, and that would help it avoid potential court battles by civil society for noncomplia­nce with the country’s own laws and court decisions.

First, SA should continue to extend an invitation for Russia to attend the summit. But, through diplomatic channels, request that the Russian delegation be led by its foreign minister, Sergei Lavrov.

Lavrov has in essence become the face of Russia on the internatio­nal stage since the start of the war in Ukraine.

Second, during the Covidpande­mic, it became clear that physical presence at internatio­nal gatherings for heads of states could be substitute­d with virtual attendance.

The UN General Assembly set a good benchmark for this when heads of state submitted video statements due to pandemic restrictio­ns.

The need to sign summit documentat­ion by the heads of state is not an impediment to virtual attendance.

Putin can sign the documents electronic­ally or after the summit, if a non-electronic signature is required.

The ball is now in the South African government’s court. The hope is that it makes the right decision, one which is in the best interests of the country and its people not Russia or the likes of the US, especially as neither major power is a signatory to the ICC’s statute.

Neither should prescribe to SA what it should decide.

Most importantl­y, the government must not trample on its own laws and court decisions. Compliance with the constituti­on must be the priority. Making a decision that is in the interests of SA and its people would also provide guidance to the other 32 African ICC signatory states, should they ever be faced with a similar dilemma in the future.

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