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Ukraine war: Switzerland offers Putin ‘immunity' for peace talks

Ukraine war: Switzerland offers Putin ‘immunity' for peace talks

Switzerland would grant Russian President Vladimir Putin immunity if he came to the country for talks on peace in Ukraine , despite the International Criminal Court's arrest warrant, it said on Tuesday.
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Swiss Foreign Minister Ignazio Cassis told a press conference that, under certain circumstances, he would be allowed to set foot in Switzerland.
Last year, the Swiss government defined 'the rules for granting immunity to a person under an international arrest warrant. If this person comes for a peace conference – not if they come for private reasons', Cassis said.
As a member of the
International Criminal Court , Switzerland would be legally obliged to arrest Putin.
French President
Emmanuel Macron raised the possibility of a peace summit between Putin and his Ukrainian counterpart
Volodymyr Zelensky being held in
Europe , in 'a neutral country, maybe Switzerland'.
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'I'm pushing for Geneva,' he said in an interview aired earlier on Tuesday on French television.
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Even if both accept the view that Russia's aims are primarily about its own idea of security rather than conquest or elimination of Ukraine, would Europe accept Putin's demands for a major overhaul of the military balance in east-central Europe. Trump appears less concerned about the prospect of a truncated Ukraine subordinated to Russia. His major concerns seem to lie elsewhere, perhaps in the Nobel Peace Prize he covets. But the US may have to guarantee the security of Ukraine against future Russian attacks, something that Trump has hinted at, even as he abhors the idea of sending American troops into foreign conflicts. While leaders talk peace, Russian drone strikes continue in Ukraine. Photo: Serhii Masin / Anadolu via Getty Images / The Conversation Wars have consequences, both for the victorious and the defeated. 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