Putin to skip BRICS summit in S. Africa after arrest threat
JOHANNESBURG: Vladimir Putin, who is under an international arrest warrant, will not attend a BRICS nations summit in South Africa next month, the country’s presidency said on Wednesday, ending months of speculation over whether the Russian President would show up.
Putin’s potential visit has been a thorny diplomatic issue for Pretoria.
The Russian leader is the target of an International Criminal Court (ICC) arrest warrant — a provision that South Africa as an ICC member would be expected to implement were he to set foot in the country.
“By mutual agreement, President Vladimir Putin of the Russian Federation will not attend the summit,” Vincent Magwenya, a spokesman for President Cyril Ramaphosa, said in a statement.
FM Lavrov will attend the gathering instead of Russian president
Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov will represent Russia, Magwenya said.
The decision follows “a number of consultations” held by Ramaphosa recently, the latest of which took place last night, he added.
Pretoria is the current chair of the BRICS group, an acronym for heavyweights Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa, which sees itself as a counterweight to Western economic domination.
Putin was formally invited to a BRICS summit due to take place in Johannesburg between August 22 and 24, but Pretoria has been under heavy domestic and international pressure not to host him.
The other countries’ leaders will all be in attendance, Magwenya said.
“President Ramaphosa is confident that the Summit will be a success and calls on the nation to extend the necessary hospitality to the many delegates who will arrive from various parts of the continent and the globe,” he said. Putin is sought by the ICC over accusations that Russia unlawfully deported Ukrainian children.
In court papers released on Tuesday, Ramaphosa wrote that arresting him would have amounted to a declaration of war on Russia.
The assessment was given in an affidavit responding to an application by the country’s leading opposition party, the Democratic Alliance (DA), which aimed at forcing the government’s hand and ensuring the Kremlin leader was handed over to the ICC if he were to arrive.
Victory for Pretoria
Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov denied Russia threatened to wage war but said in Moscow that it was “absolutely clear to everyone what an attempt to encroach on the head of the Russian state would mean”.
The affidavit revealed South Africa was seeking an exemption under ICC rules, arguing that enacting the arrest could have threatened the “security, peace and order of the state”.
Published in Dawn, July 20th, 2023