Putin to visit ICC member Mongolia on Sep 3: Kremlin

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Russian President Vladimir Putin will next week visit Mongolia, a member of the International Criminal Court (ICC) that has issued an arrest warrant for the Russian leader, the Kremlin said Thursday.

It will be the first time Putin has travelled to a country that has ratified the founding treaty of the ICC, the Rome Statute, since the Hague-based court issued the warrant for him in March 2023 over the illegal deportation of Ukrainian children.

ICC members are expected to make the arrest if the Russian leader sets foot on their territory.

Mongolia signed the Rome Statute treaty in 2000 and ratified it in 2002.

The Kremlin said Putin will travel to neighbouring Mongolia on September 3 to mark the "85th anniversary of the joint victory of Soviet and Mongolian forces over Japanese militarists on the Khalkhin Gol River".

The battle took place in 1939 during the Japanese occupation of nearby Manchuria.

The Kremlin said Putin and Mongolian President Ukhnaa Khurelsukh will discuss bilateral relations and "exchange views on current international and regional issues."

The visit will fall a month after US Secretary of State Anthony Blinken visited Mongolia as Washington seeks closer ties with the landlocked country.

The Kremlin has called the ICC warrant "absurd".

Putin has reduced his foreign travel since launching a full-scale offensive against Ukraine in February 2022 and limited it even more since the ICC issued the arrest warrant.