Will Putin be arrested in South Africa if he goes to the BRICS summit?
The country itself doesn’t seem to know. Legal expert Gleb Bogush calculates the likelihood of Putin’s arrest

South Africa is still trying to decide what to do about the potential arrival of Russian President Vladimir Putin at the BRICS summit, which is due to take place in August. The International Criminal Court (ICC) issued an arrest warrant for Putin, and South Africa signed the Rome Statute, which means it must arrest and deport the Russian leader should he attend the summit. But it clearly has no desire to do so: the South African authorities are going back and forth between offering to grant immunity to Putin and reconsidering their statements. At this point, South Africa has decided to grant immunity to delegations and their heads — but it doesn’t apply to people with arrest warrants looming over them. Irina Tumakova attempts to make sense of this situation with the help of Gleb Bogush, an expert in international law.
The statement explicitly called for this arrest warrant to be executed should such a situation arise.
I would not underestimate the importance of democratic institutions in South Africa.

Moscow’s territorial gains falter as world marks fourth anniversary of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine

Alexey Navalny’s mother has compensation claim for his death in prison thrown out

Zelensky addresses Ukrainians from Kyiv bunker on fourth anniversary of Russian invasion
Police officer killed in apparent suicide bombing at Moscow station
Russia opens criminal investigation into Telegram founder Pavel Durov for ‘facilitating terrorist activity’
Four years of hell
Putin’s misjudged effort to subjugate Ukraine has only helped cement its national identity, and it won’t ever stop fighting

Kyiv blames Russia for fatal Lviv terror attack that left police officer dead

Ukraine and Russia exchange deadly overnight energy infrastructure strikes

Zelensky accuses Putin of starting World War III when he invaded Ukraine



