Bangkok Post

FM Lavrov visits South Africa

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CAPE TOWN: Sergey Lavrov, the Russian foreign minister, arrived in Cape Town yesterday amid a diplomatic storm over whether South Africa will honour an Internatio­nal Criminal Court arrest warrant for President Vladimir Putin.

Mr Putin is expected to travel to South Africa, a member of the court, in August to attend a summit meeting of BRICS nations — Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa — with the court’s arrest warrant hanging over his visit. His foreign minister, Mr Lavrov, is in South Africa this week to prepare for that meeting.

The issue has triggered a public debate over South Africa’s membership in the court, pitting the governing African National Congress’ historical ties with Russia against the country’s economic ties with the United States and Europe.

Mr Lavrov is fresh off a whirlwind trip around East Africa that included meetings with leaders of Kenya, Burundi and Mozambique, as Moscow shores up the support of its allies in Africa. Mr Lavrov and his South African counterpar­t, Naledi Pandor, are expected to discuss the ICC warrant. South Africa must balance its obligation­s to the court charged with investigat­ing war crimes and the country’s ties with Russia.

Mr Putin’s expected attendance at the August meeting has become a fraught political issue for South Africa’s president, Cyril Ramaphosa, and his government. The internatio­nal warrant, which cites Mr Putin’s role in the abduction and deportatio­n of Ukrainian children, has isolated Mr Putin, a leader with an aura of impunity.

This week, South Africa’s Foreign Ministry said the summit would be protected by diplomatic immunity. That immunity, however, is “not for specific individual­s,” the ministry said.

“These immunities do not override any warrant that may have been issued by any internatio­nal tribunal against any attendee of the conference,” the Department of Internatio­nal Relations and Cooperatio­n, a division of the Foreign Ministry, said in a statement.

At the same time, South Africa’s main opposition party, the Democratic Alliance, approached a high court for a declarator­y order on South Africa’s obligation to honour the ICC warrant. The party hopes the court order will leave no ambiguity about whether South African officials are legally bound to detain Mr Putin and extradite him to The Hague, Netherland­s. The party also wants a judge to clarify the process of arresting a sitting president, said Glynnis Breytenbac­h, a party lawmaker.

The pre-emptive court action would “avoid a repeat of the al-Bashir saga,” Ms Breytenbac­h said. In 2015, South African officials failed to enact an ICC warrant and arrest former Sudanese leader Omar al-Bashir, who was in Johannesbu­rg to attend an African Union meeting. A South African court ruled that the government was legally required to arrest al-Bashir hours after he had left the country. The court has not set a date for the hearing on Mr Putin’s visit.

The legal proceeding­s illustrate the confusion over South Africa’s stance toward Russia. The United States has criticised South Africa over its warm relations with Moscow while Mr Ramaphosa said his country was facing enormous pressure.

 ?? ?? Putin: Faces arrest warrant from the ICC amid talk of Cape Town visit
Putin: Faces arrest warrant from the ICC amid talk of Cape Town visit
 ?? ?? Lavrov: Visiting Africa and prepping for Putin’s arrival
Lavrov: Visiting Africa and prepping for Putin’s arrival

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