RU Putin Gets a Red-Carpet Welcome in Mongolia Despite Arrest Warrant - Ukrainian officials expressed outrage over the Russian leader’s visit, warning they would seek to “ensure that this has consequences” for Mongolia.

Putin Gets a Red-Carpet Welcome in Mongolia Despite Arrest Warrant
The New York Times (archive.ph)
By Valerie Hopkins
2024-09-03 16:21:19GMT

putin01.jpg
President Vladimir Putin of Russia with President Ukhnaa Khurelsukh of Mongolia, in Ulaanbaatar on Tuesday, in a photograph released by Russian state media.Credit...Vyacheslav Prokofyev/Sputnik, via Reuters

President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia was warmly received by the leader of Mongolia on Tuesday in his first state visit to a member nation of the International Criminal Court since it issued a warrant for his arrest last year.

Instead of arresting Mr. Putin, as the I.C.C., Ukraine, and human rights groups have urged, Mongolia, which is highly dependent on Russia for its energy needs, gave the Russian leader a red-carpet welcome in the capital, Ulaanbaatar. Mr. Putin was greeted by an honor guard, some on horseback, whose uniforms were inspired by the 13th-century Mongol ruler Genghis Khan.

Following the ceremonial welcome, Mr. Putin and President Ukhnaa Khurelsukh of Mongolia held talks in a traditional yurt in Ulaanbaatar’s State Palace.

“Relations between the Russian Federation and Mongolia are developing in all directions,” Mr. Putin said during the public portion of the meeting, according to RIA Novosti, a Russian state news agency.

Mr. Putin’s visit is being portrayed at home as a sign that Western efforts to turn him into a global pariah since he launched the full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022 have not been effective. The Kremlin has sought to both diminish the court’s moral and legal authority and to project the message that Moscow’s authority and dominance in natural resources wield more influence — — at least in its geographic neighborhood — than commitments to international law.

Mr. Khurelsukh expressed appreciation to Mr. Putin for his visit, the first in five years.

“It is gratifying to note that relations between our countries and peoples are traditionally friendly and have reached the level of a comprehensive strategic partnership,” he continued.

Mongolia, which relies on Russia for 95 percent of its petroleum products, has refrained from condemning Russia’s war in Ukraine and has abstained during United Nations votes concerning the conflict. Mongolia was one of the top destinations for Russians fleeing the country in 2022 after the war began and the Kremlin announced a mobilization campaign.

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Mr. Putin’s motorcade in Ulaanbaatar on Tuesday, in a photograph released by Russian state media.Credit...Vyacheslav Prokofyev/Sputnik, via Reuters

Officials in Ukraine, which has been under intense missile and drone attacks in the past week and a half, expressed outrage over Mr. Putin’s visit.

“The Mongolian government’s failure to carry out the binding I.C.C. arrest warrant for Putin is a heavy blow to the International Criminal Court and the international criminal justice system,” Georgiy Tykhyi, a Ukrainian Foreign Ministry spokesman, wrote on X.

“Mongolia has allowed an accused criminal to evade justice, thereby sharing responsibility for the war crimes. We will work with partners to ensure that this has consequences for Ulaanbaatar.”

The Mongolian government has not commented on the calls to arrest Mr. Putin.

In March 2023, the I.C.C. issued a warrant for Mr. Putin’s arrest, accusing him of committing war crimes with the abduction and deportation of Ukrainian children. The court also issued a warrant for Russia’s commissioner for children’s rights, Maria Lvova-Belova.

Russia, like the United States, does not recognize the jurisdiction of the court, which is based in The Hague in the Netherlands. However, Mongolia is one of 124 signatories of the Rome statute, which governs membership in the international court.

He brought a large delegation to Ulaanbaatar, including the deputy prime minister Aleksei Overchuk, and the deputy defense minister Aleksei Fomin, as well as top officials in energy, foreign affairs, transport and other ministries.

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Mongolia, which relies on Russia for 95 percent of its fuel, has refrained from condemning the war in Ukraine and has abstained during United Nations votes concerning the conflict.Credit...Chang W. Lee/The New York Times

Executives from several large state companies were also part of his entourage, including from the Rosatom State Atomiс Energy Corporation and Rosneft Oil Company, the country’s sovereign wealth fund. The heads of the Russian regions of Buryatia and Irkutsk, which border Mongolia, were also in attendance.

On Tuesday, the Russian energy ministry and Mongolia’s Ministry of Industry and Mineral Resources signed an agreement on oil product supplies, as well as on providing Mongolia with aviation fuel, Russia’s Interfax agency reported.

“We invariably respond to requests from Mongolian friends for assistance in meeting the growing demand for fuel and lubricants, including on preferential terms,” Mr. Putin said, according to Interfax.

Since a rubber stamp election in March, Mr. Putin has made seven foreign trips, including to China, North Korea, Vietnam, Azerbaijan and Uzbekistan. In all of 2023, Mr. Putin made six foreign trips, including to the United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia. He declined to travel to South Africa for a summit of the BRICS group of countries — Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa — last year because South Africa is also part of the I.C.C.

A small group of protesters gathered on the eve of Mr. Putin’s visit at the central Genghis Khan Square, with some holding posters calling Mr. Putin a war criminal, according to Mongolian news outlets. A heavy security perimeter prevented any protesters from getting close to the square on Tuesday, and six people were briefly detained.
 
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He declined to travel to South Africa for a summit of the BRICS group of countries — Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa — last year because South Africa is also part of the I.C.C.
This is retarded (((posturing))). Putin didn't go to the BRICS summit because the travel is dangerous, not because he's afraid of the South African government.

Executives from several large state companies were also part of his entourage, including from the Rosatom State Atomiс Energy Corporation and Rosneft Oil Company
Lmao more treason. Rosatom and Rosneft executives should be tried and shot, and let's not forget the now ESG-compliant Russian Railways.

Since a rubber stamp election in March
Now this is gay: who do (((they))) think was the real winner?

Don't care a lick about the Ukrainian govt, the empty threats it makes or what happens to it after it tried to ban the Orthodox Church. Zelensky can reap the rewards of his sowing and try asking the Lord for forgiveness, for once.
The orthodox church is a cuck church, and orthodox lobbyists push Russia to suck the cocks of orthodox "brothers" like Greeks, Bulgars, Czechs, as well as Georgians and Armenians, and try to pay Serbia for post-breakup sex. The ones who are not NATO lobbyists are recruited by Israel instead.

Russia's religion is the Great Patriotic War -- this is both factually true and good. The orthodox church was on the other side of it.
 
You've got to laugh because they mention how toothless the ICC is in this article, yet still give it this headline.

Putin not arrested by ICC member Mongolia, which could now face prosecution
Politico EU (archive.ph)
By Joe Stanley-Smith and Csongor Körömi
2024-09-02 20:13:52GMT
Russian President Vladimir Putin, who is the subject of an International Criminal Court arrest warrant, arrived smoothly in Mongolia for a state visit on Monday.

Under international law, Mongolia — a member of the ICC — is supposed to act upon the court’s warrants. The European Union and Ukraine have both reminded the East Asian nation of this obligation in recent days, but Russian officials have said they have “no worries” about Putin’s visit.

The ICC’s warrant, issued March 2023, accuses Putin of war crimes related to the deportation and transfer of children from occupied areas of Ukraine to Russia.

There is no indication as yet that Mongolia plans to arrest Putin. If it fails to, it will likely face prosecution over its inaction, a legal expert told POLITICO.

“Mongolia will most certainly be prosecuted by the International Criminal Court for breaching its duty of cooperation,” said Tamás Hoffmann, senior research fellow at the Institute for Legal Studies.

“The ICC may then decide to refer the case to the Assembly of Parties, which could condemn Mongolia’s violation under a so-called non-compliance procedure. However, there are no serious consequences, such as sanctions, for the offending country,” Hoffmann said.

In 2015, South Africa failed to arrest Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir, who was wanted for crimes against humanity including genocide, during a visit to the country. The ICC two years later found the country had failed to comply with its obligations. However, it did not refer South Africa to the U.N, Security Council for censure.

Altantuya Batdorj, executive director of Amnesty International Mongolia, said: “To shelter a fugitive from international justice would not only amount to obstruction of justice. If Mongolia provides even a temporary safe haven for President Putin, it will effectively become an accomplice in ensuring impunity for some of the most serious crimes under international law.”

Mongolia, a country around half the size of Europe but inhabited by only around 3.4 million people, has important trade ties with Russia, which along with China is one of only two countries it shares a border with.

The ICC did not immediately respond to POLITICO’s request for comment.
 
Does Ukraine actual think anyone cares about it? Once it usefulness as a little proxy fails it be forgotten. Then articles about how corrupt it is and wait there actual was Neo-nazis ! Like what happen before 2014 when even CNN was reporting on Ukraine killing it's own citizens.
 
What would've Mongolia gained from arresting Putin?
America will promise to be their friend. Friendship includes importing NGOs who are deebly goncerned about people of alphabet in Mongolia. That’s okay, they can get fast tracked to a NATO membership but only if they promise to be friends with Israel.
 
The orthodox church is a cuck church, and orthodox lobbyists push Russia to suck the cocks of orthodox "brothers" like Greeks, Bulgars, Czechs, as well as Georgians and Armenians, and try to pay Serbia for post-breakup sex. The ones who are not NATO lobbyists are recruited by Israel instead.

Russia's religion is the Great Patriotic War -- this is both factually true and good. The orthodox church was on the other side of it.
May the Lord bless you, keep you, and deliver you from all your ailments.
 
I honestly thought Mongolia was like Tibet. A region that was under Russian (or Chinese) control with maybe a regional govenor. TIL it has an actual president.
 
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God please try something Ukraine, The Mongolians sucker punching NATO and winning this shitshow is a WWE tier bullshit twist that I think the American taxpayer deserves for the billions they've funnelled into the conflict.

"BAH GAWD ITS THE KHAN OFF THE TOP ROPE. WITH THE BLUE SKY AS MY WITNESS ZELENSKY IS BROKEN IN HALF"
 
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