Slovak PM comments on Putin and Netanyahu arrest warrants

By Russia Today | Created at 2025-01-13 09:10:14 | Updated at 2025-01-13 16:46:32 7 hours ago
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Those demanding the detention of the Russian president must apply the same standards to the Israeli leader, Robert Fico has said

Slovak Prime Minister Robert Fico has said those demanding the arrest of Vladimir Putin in compliance with an International Criminal Court (ICC) warrant must apply the same standards to Benjamin Netanyahu, who is expected to visit Poland later this month without being detained.

Fico, who traveled to Moscow last month to discuss the importation of Russian natural gas and Kiev’s decision to cut transit of the fuel through its territory, said Slovakia would not execute the ICC warrant if Putin visited the country. He anticipated that such a move would attract criticism from NGOs and media in Slovakia.

“I assume that you would shout that, of course, he should be arrested immediately and taken straight to jail,” Fico said.

He questioned whether there would be similar calls in the event of a state visit by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who is the subject of “the same international arrest warrant as President Putin.”

The ICC issued arrest warrants for Putin and Russia’s ombudsman for children, Maria Lvova-Belova, in March 2023. The warrants relate to allegations by Kiev that the Russian government unlawfully deported dozens of Ukrainian children during the conflict between the two nations.

Moscow has claimed that its actions were being misrepresented. The children in question were evacuated from dangerous areas by Russian authorities and were not abducted, officials have said. Kiev has since acknowledged that many of the children it initially listed as being kidnapped were actually with their families in third nations, including Germany.

The ICC issued arrest warrants for Netanyahu, former Israeli defense minister Yoav Gallant, and leaders of the Palestinian militant group Hamas last November. The Israeli officials were accused of war crimes in Gaza, including the use of starvation as a method of warfare.

Last year, Warsaw suggested that Netanyahu would be arrested if he visited the country to commemorate the 80th anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz later this month. However, President Andrzej Duda has since secured assurances from Prime Minister Donald Tusk that the government would not execute the ICC warrant in such circumstances.

The Hague-based tribunal prosecutes individuals accused of major crimes on behalf of the 125 signatories of its founding treaty, the Rome Statute. The US, Russia, China, and India are among the nations that don’t recognize the ICC’s authority.

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