Mongolia�s Reluctance to Arrest Putin a �Major Setback� for International Law, Experts Say

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
accordance with customary international law, heads of state, heads of government and foreign ministers enjoy personal immunity in foreign
in the Battle of Khalkhin Gol
supporting Ukraine and accountability efforts as much, who do not mind doing business with Putin and benefitting from Russia's war
echoed by Human Rights Watch and several Russian opposition figures who published at least two joint letters to the Mongolian government on
was forced to skip the BRICS summit in ICC member South Africa after its government failed to guarantee that it would not arrest the wanted
states parties after the court issued an arrest warrant for him over committing multiple counts of crimes against humanity, war crimes and
its Pre-Trial and Appeals Chambers, which also ruled that member states could not invoke immunities as a ground for refusing to arrest a
obligations under the ICC Statute