Putin meets with Mongian president amid calls for Russian dictator’s arrest

On Tuesday, Kremlin leader Vladimir Putin met with his Mongian counterpart in Ulaanbaatar, his first visit to a member state of the International Criminal Court (ICC) after it issued an arrest warrant for the Russian leader last year.

According to Ukrinform, this was reported by AFP.

Putin met with Mongian President Ukhnaagiin Khurelsukh on Genghis Khan Square in Ulaanbaatar, also known as Sukhbaatar Square.

The day before, a small protest gathered in the Mongian capital, where demonstrators held placards demanding “Get out of here, war criminal Putin.”

Tightened security measures prevented the participants of another protest scheduled for today from approaching the Russian leader.

Instead, protesters gathered about a block away from the Monument to the Pitical Repressed, erected in honor of those who suffered under Soviet-backed communist rule in Mongia.

Vladimir Putin is wanted by the International Criminal Court in The Hague on charges of illegally deporting Ukrainian children after the invasion of Ukraine by Russian tros in 2022.

Ukraine reacted sharply to the visit, accusing Mongia of sharing responsibility for Putin's war crimes after the country's authorities failed to detain him at the airport.

Mongia is located between Russia and China, has close cultural ties with Moscow, and trade relations with Beijing. Mongia was under Moscow's influence during the Soviet era and has tried to maintain friendly relations with both the Kremlin and Beijing since the clapse of the communist state in 1991.

Mongia did not condemn Russia's invasion of Ukraine and abstained from voting on UN resutions condemning it.

As reported, on the evening of Monday, September 2, Putin arrived in Mongia on an official visit.

Read also: Putin arrived in Mongia – Russian media

This is Putin's first visit to a country that has ratified the Rome Statute and which is supposed to arrest the Russian leader under a warrant issued in 2023 by the ICC in The Hague.

The Kremlin has not officially commented on the possibility of arresting Putin, who is accused by the ICC of war crimes for the “illegal deportation” of children and pele from the occupied Ukrainian territories.

The Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Ukraine responded to the decision of the Mongian authorities not to arrest Russian leader Vladimir Putin, who is on a visit to Mongia, despite an international arrest warrant.

Source: ukrinform.net

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