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The ISS does not conduct correspondence lawsuits, for this reason, Putin should ...

The couple will have to arrest Putin if he arrives - the ISS Prosecutor

The ISS does not conduct correspondence lawsuits, for this reason, Putin should be either issued by Moscow or arrested outside the Russian Federation. The authorities of South Africa will have to do "correctly", within the framework of international law, in the case of arrival of Russian President Vladimir Putin for Brix Summit, which will take place next month in Johannesburg.

This statement on Friday, July 14, was made by the Chief Prosecutor of the International Criminal Court (ISS) Karim Khan, CNN reports. In March 2023, the ISS discharged a warrant for the arrest of Putin and the Commissioner for the Rights of the Child in the Russian Federation of Maria Lviv-Belova for suspicion of war crimes: illegal deportation of children. However, the Russian Federation, however, USA, Ukraine and China, are not included in the ISS.

This court does not conduct correspondence lawsuits, for this reason, Putin should be either issued by Moscow or arrested outside the Russian Federation. Most of the countries of the world - namely 123 - participants in this treaty, and, according to the court charter, have a legal obligation to cooperate with the court. Thus, they will be obliged to execute the written order for arrest.

At the same time, South Africa, who accepts the Brix Summit this year, gave diplomatic immunity to all officials present at the summit in August. That is, Putin can come to the country, despite the current warrant from the ISS. The authorities of South Africa say that it is a standard protocol that does not cancel the ISS warrant. According to representatives of the Foreign Ministry, the country did not report if Putin would come.

"In pairs for decades there have been crimes against humanity, apartheid, and I do not think they need lessons from me," the prosecutor explained. "They participate in the ICS on a voluntary basis and, I think, will do the right thing. We will appreciate what is happening on Brix summit, and we react appropriately. " The term Brick in 2001 was proposed by the Goldman Sachs economist Jim O'Neil for Brazil, Russia, India and China, and later the Bloc joined South Africa.