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Why Mongolia did not arrest Putin under the ICC warrant The main intrigue was whether the Mongolian authorities would dare to arrest Putin as demanded by the International Criminal Court (ICC).
It’s either a triumph for people power or a worrying lurch towards authoritarianism, depending on whom you ask.
NPR's Mary Louise Kelly talks to David Bosco, professor at Indiana University, about Mongolia’s decision not to arrest Russian President Vladimir Putin, despite a warrant from the ICC.
Russian President Vladimir Putin has commenced his state visit to Mongolia this week despite the nation's Rome Statute obligation to arrest the leader on an International Criminal Court warrant.
The new prime minister of Mongolia has pledged to address the economic demands of protesters after their daily rallies led to the fall of his predecessor ...
So remote and ultima Thulish is Mongolia, ... “Comrade Amor has been elected President of the Soviet Republic of Mongolia in succession to the late President Zeren-Dorochi whose assistant he ...
Uilstuguldur Altankhuyag was appointed as Chief of Staff of the Office of the President of Mongolia, Montsame reported ...