Russian President Putin won’t travel to South Africa for BRICS summit
- July 21, 2023
- Posted by: OptimizeIAS Team
- Category: DPN Topics
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Russian President Putin won’t travel to South Africa for BRICS summit
Subject: International relations
Section: International Organizations
Concept:
- Russian President Vladimir Putin will not travel to South Africa to attend the upcoming BRICS summit.
- BRICS brings together five major emerging economies namely Brazil, Russia, India, China, South Africa.
- It comprises 42 percent of the world’s population, 23 percent of the global GDP and around 17 percent of the share and world trade.
- South Africa is the President of this year’s BRICS summit.
- This announcement resolved a difficult situation for South Africa, which would have been theoretically obligated to arrest Putin for alleged war crimes if he had arrived in its jurisdiction.
- In March 2023, the International Criminal Court issued a warrant against Mr. Putin.
- The action of the ICC put South Africa in a difficult position as it is expected to carry out its obligations as an ICC member.
International Criminal Court (ICC)
- The International Criminal Court is a permanent court to prosecute serious international crimes committed by individuals.
- It tries crimes such as genocide, war crimes, crimes against humanity, and aggression.
- The court was established to fight global impunity and bring to justice criminals under international law, regardless of their rank or stature.
- It is different from the United Nations’ International Court of Justice, also at The Hague.
- HQ :The Hague, The Netherlands
- Statute :Before the ICC became functional in 2002, its founding treaty was adopted by the UN General Assembly in 1998 in Rome, Italy, thereby making it the Rome Statute.
- Membership
- To become a member of the ICC or State party to the Rome Statute, countries have to sign the statute and ratify it under their respective legislatures.
- 123 countries are currently members of the ICC, with African countries making up the largest bloc.
- Notably, countries including India, China, Iraq, North Korea and Turkey never signed the Rome Statute.
- Others including the US, Russia, Israel and Syria signed, but never ratified
How does the ICC function?
- Judges & Prosecutors
- The court carries out its investigations through the Office of the Prosecutor and has 18 judges.
- Both the judges and prosecutors hold non-renewable nine-year terms.
- Process
- There are pre-trial, trial, and appellate benches in the ICC.
- The prosecutor conducts a preliminary examination in a matter, before seeking permission from pre-trial judges to open a full investigation.
- The initial examination must conclude that the crimes in question are of sufficient gravity.
- Ways to open investigations
- The prosecutor can open an investigation in three ways:
- when a case is referred by a member country in its own territory;
- when a case is referred by the UN Security Council; and
- when the prosecutor takes up a case proprio motu or on his own.
- Non-member states can also be investigated in three ways:
- if alleged crimes were perpetrated by non-members in member states,
- if the non-members accept the court’s jurisdiction, or
- when the Security Council authorises it.
Does the ICC have the authority to prosecute President Putin?
- Russia has repeatedly said that it does not.
- The ICC’s jurisdiction is limited to offences that occurred after it came into existence on July 1, 2002, and were committed either in a country that has ratified the agreement, or by a national of a country that has ratified the agreement.
- Russia is not one of the 123 States Parties to the Rome Statute that recognise the authority of the ICC.
- The United States isn’t a signatory either, and it has over the years repeatedly and aggressively denounced the ICC.
- China and India too do not recognise the ICC’s jurisdiction.
- Even Ukraine is not a State Party to the Rome Statute.
- However, in 2014, Ukraine accepted the jurisdiction of the Court over alleged crimes committed on its territory from November 2013 to February 2014.
- Again, in 2015, it accepted the ICC’s jurisdiction from 20 February 2014 onwards, with no end date.
Is there a risk of arrest for Putin outside Russia?
- Only if he travels to a State Party to the ICC — like South Africa — and only in theory.
- This is the first time that the ICC has issued an arrest warrant against the head of one of the five permanent members of the UN Security Council.
- Sudan’s former President Omar al-Bashir and Libya’s Muammar Gaddafi are the only other leaders to have been indicted by the ICC while serving as head of state.