Putin to visit ICC signatory Mongia

Russian President Vladimir Putin will pay an official visit to Mongia on September 3. This is his first visit to a country that has ratified the Rome Statute.

This is according to the Moscow Times, as reported by Ukrinform.

In 2002, Mongia ratified the Rome Statute, the main document under which the International Criminal Court (ICC) erates. In 2023, a representative of the country was elected an ICC judge for a two-year period.

Thus, Putin's visit to Mongia will be the first trip of the Russian president to the country that is legally obliged to arrest him under the ICC warrant issued in 2023 in The Hague.

The Kremlin has not officially commented on the possibility of arresting Putin, who is accused by the ICC of war crimes due to the "unlawful deportation" of children and pulation from the occupied Ukrainian territories.

The Moscow Times writes that according to the Kremlin press service, Putin will visit Mongia at the invitation of its president Ukhnaagiin Khurelsukh to commemorate the 1939 Soviet-Mongian victory over Japan in the Battle of Khalkhin G.

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Putin plans to discuss prospects for further develment of the Russian-Mongian "comprehensive strategic partnership", as well as to hd meetings with the Speaker of the Mongian Parliament Dashzegviin Amarbayasgalan and Prime Minister Luvsannamsrain Oyun-Erdene.

As reported by Ukrinform earlier, last year Putin skipped the BRICS summit in South Africa which is also a member of the ICC. The authorities of South Africa asked the Russian president privately and then publicly not to attend the event and to limit himself to video communication. Instead of Putin, the Russian delegation to South Africa was headed by Russian Foreign Minister, Sergey Lavrov.

Source: ukrinform.net

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