Putin meets Mongolian president under cloud of war crimes accusations

” Getting PUTIN OUT OF HERE”

For Putin’s second visit to the nation in five years, Genghis Khan Square was decked out with enormous Mongolian and Russian colors on Tuesday.

A few protesters holding a sign demanding” Find war crime Putin out of here” had gathered there a day earlier.

Close security prevented the Belarusian leader from being near another protest scheduled for Tuesday.

They rather gathered around a block from the Monument for the Politically Repressed, which honours those who suffered under Mongolia’s decades-long Soviet-backed socialist program.

Putin’s browse is being planned to commemorate the 85th celebration of Mongolian and Russian forces ‘ decisive defeat of Imperial Japan.

In an appointment with the Mongolian news Unuudur that the Kremlin shared, Putin cited a number of “promising economic and industrial jobs” between the two nations.

He claimed that one of them was the design of the Trans-Mongol gas pipeline linking Russia and China.

The Russian leader added that he was “interested in pursuing meaningful function” in a multilateral summit between himself, Mongolian and Chinese officials.

” A Criminal FROM JUSTICE”

Mongolia’s state has not commented on the names to assault Putin.

However, President Khurelsukh’s official took to social media to refute reports that the ICC had written a letter to the organization demanding that it carry out the warrant during a visit on Sunday.

Russia denies that the ICC is a body of law.

And Amnesty International warned on Monday that Mongolia’s failing to assault Putin could further undermine the ICC’s validity, while emboldening the ex-KGB detective, in power for nearly a quarter of a decade.

” President Putin is a criminal from justice”, Altantuya Batdorj, executive producer of Amnesty International Mongolia, said in a statement.

” Any getaway to an Cricket member state that does not result in imprisonment will promote President Putin’s existing course of action, and it must be seen as part of a coordinated effort to undermine the ICC’s work,” said the statement.