A Ukrainian Nobel peace prize winner, Oleksandra Romantsova has urged South Africa to honour the ruling of the International Criminal Court’s arrest warrant on Russia’s President, Vladimir Putin.
Romantsova, the head of an NGO that became the winner of Ukraine’s first-ever peace prize last year, urged the South African government to “show us that they care”.
Romantsova, who was in South Africa to garner support for Ukraine, told a media briefing in Johannesburg, “For us South Africa is a place where people are fighting for freedom, for equality for dignity.”
Putin is set to attend the BRICS summit in the country in August.
Romantsova is in South Africa as part of a delegation of academics and non-profit organisations, but was not well received by the ruling African National Congress (ANC) party. However, she managed to meet senior officials at the South African foreign ministry.
“We are trying to meet (the ANC) and for me, it’s surprising that it’s so difficult to organise such a meeting,” said Olexiy Haran, another member of the delegation and a politics professor at the National University of Kyiv-Mohyla Academy.
South Africa’s President, Cyril Ramaphosa said he was aware of the legal development after the International Criminal Court issued an arrest warrant on March 17 against the Russian President for alleged war crimes in Ukraine.
Despite the supposed implications, the Russian president is expected in South Africa for the summit.
As a signatory to the Rome Statute, South Africa is expected to honour ICC’s rulings, but it is unlikely to take action on the warrant, going by its strong ties with Russia and its antecedent in a similar case when former Sudanese leader, Omar al-Bashir visited. The action was however condemned by the court at the time.