Sunday Tribune

BRICS summit without Putin will have significan­t effect on agenda

- MPHO RANTAO mpho.rantao@inl.co.za

RUSSIAN President Vladimir Putin overshadow­ed the weekend’s BRICS political event with his announceme­nt that he would attend the August summit virtually rather than physically.

He announced via an official statement that, by “mutual agreement” with President Cyril Ramaphosa, he would not attend the annual summit in Joburg on August 22-24 physically.

Instead, the country’s foreign minister, Sergey Lavrov, will attend the summit. It is unclear why Putin opted to send Russia’s foreign minister rather than its prime minister to a global summit with other world leaders. But this action could speak to the exceptiona­l nature of the situation.

Putin’s arrest warrant for alleged war crimes, which he has denied, has been a diplomatic and political thorn in South Africa's side since it was announced by the Internatio­nal Criminal Court (ICC).

While the government may heave a sigh of relief for avoiding diplomatic dilemmas regarding Putin, South Africa’s stance and actions, both domestical­ly and internatio­nally, have put the country in a precarious position regarding foreign policy. Also, local

MPS made contradict­ory statements about the country's need to arrest Putin if he attended the summit.

South Africa is obligated to apprehend persons charged by the ICC as a signatory to the Rome Statute, the treaty governing the Hague court.

Internatio­nal relations specialist Professor Chris Landsberg told SABC News that Putin's virtual attendance would greatly affect the agenda of the summit. “It's the first time in 15 years that an important founder member will not be there. The agenda will be affected, (and) some key decisions will not be made,” Landsberg said.

He said the South African government should take responsibi­lity for the manner in which the matter was handled and that the summit would be below the government’s expectatio­ns.

In response to Putin, US State Department spokespers­on Matthew Miller said: “President Putin can hardly leave his own borders now. He’s an internatio­nal pariah who can barely leave his own borders for fear of arrest.”

Ramaphosa and the Department of Internatio­nal Relations and Co-operation (Dirco) have maintained the country’s neutral stance, arguing that South Africa refused to take sides in the conflict between Russia and Ukraine.

Putin's announceme­nt also overshadow­ed the week’s latest developmen­ts: 40 countries have applied and expressed interest in joining the BRICS Bank ahead of the summit. They include Argentina, Iran, the United Arab Emirates, Cuba, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, the Comoros, Gabon, Kazakhstan and Saudi Arabia.

The additional names from the first 20 interested parties mentioned in June reflected the comments made by Dirco Minister Naledi Pandor, on developing countries turning to each other and economic blocs for support after feeling failed by developed countries during the Covid-19 pandemic.

“The world has faltered in co-operation. Developed countries have never met their commitment­s to the developing world and are trying to shift all responsibi­lity to the Global South," Pandor said in June.

The annual summit is expected to cover trade and investment facilitati­on, sustainabl­e developmen­t, innovation and global governance reform.

An interestin­g key point of discussion will be the bloc’s propositio­n of a new, gold-backed currency. This controvers­ial topic has grown over BRICS members’ comments in favour of a non-western dominant alternativ­e currency system that would benefit a multi-polar world.

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