South Africa’s Putin dilemma
South Africa is trying to hold a BRICS summit without arresting the Russian president. The West, however, has some leverage over Pretoria

South Africa is set to host the 15th BRICS summit in August 2023. Leaders of the five members of this union — Brazil, Russia, India, China, and South Africa — traditionally attend this event in person. However, the International Criminal Court (ICC) threw a spanner in the works for Russian President Vladimir Putin by issuing an arrest warrant against him on suspicion of committing war crimes in Ukraine.
South Africa is now trying to find a way out of this mess, balancing between the desire not to offend Moscow and Putin personally and the responsibility to uphold its international obligations assumed under the Rome Statute that established the ICC. South African President Cyril Ramaphosa will likely attend the Russia-Africa summit in late July to find a possible compromise for all parties involved. Alternatively, rumours suggest that the BRICS summit can potentially even be moved to China.
Novaya-Europe spoke to South African experts to get a handle on the situation: what’s happening in the country now, will Putin be able to attend the summit, and what influence can the US and the EU wield over Pretoria.
For Putin, this summit will serve as a brilliant opportunity to defy the international community by showing the world that the recent attempts to isolate Russia have failed. For the ICC, it is a test of its authority
“We have no option not to arrest Putin. If he comes here, we will be forced to detain him,”
“Those arguments that Russia makes about a fairer world, a multipolar world, have a lot of resonance in South Africa, they land on fertile ground here,”
In the end, al-Bashir successfully evaded detention during his trip to South Africa and left the country after the summit.
“And I think also, sometimes, we find that the more [Western] Embassies push that they don’t like it, the more South Africa [turns] towards China and Russia. So the more pressure that’s applied, especially if it’s just verbal pressure, the more South Africa digs its heels in.”

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