May 28, 2024
U.S. ambassador accuses South Africa of arming Russia | CBC News

U.S. ambassador accuses South Africa of arming Russia | CBC News

The U. S. ambassador to South Africa accused the country Thursday of providing weapons to Russia via a cargo ship that docked secretly at a naval base near the city of Cape Town for three days in December.

Ambassador Reuben Brigety said the U.S. was “confident” that weapons were loaded onto the vessel at the Simon’s Town naval base, between Dec. 6 and 8, and then transported to Russia, according to reports carried by multiple South African news outlets, after a news conference in the capital, Pretoria.

Brigety said the alleged arming of Russia was “extremely serious” and called into question South Africa’s supposed neutrality in the war.

South African President Cyril Ramaphosa was in Cape Town answering questions in Parliament when news of Brigety’s comments broke. When a lawmaker asked about the weapons, the president replied that “the matter is being looked into, and in time we will be able to speak about it.”

Ramaphosa declined to comment further, citing the need for an investigation to play out.

The leader of the political opposition, John Steenhuisen, asked the president if South Africa was “actively arming Russian soldiers who are murdering and maiming innocent people?”

Steenhuisen identified the vessel as the Lady R, a Russian-flagged cargo ship.

Two men in suits are seen in conversation inside a paneled room.
In this handout photo released by Russian Foreign Ministry Press Service, South African President Cyril Ramaphosa, right, talks with Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov in Pretoria, South Africa on Jan. 23. (Russian Foreign Ministry Press Service/The Associated Press)

Steenhuisen’s party, the Democratic Alliance, raised questions earlier this year about a “mystery” Russian vessel making a stop at the Simon’s Town base.

At the time, the South African government didn’t comment publicly on the matter, saying it needed to gather information.

In late December, South African Defence Minister Thandi Modise said the ship appeared to be handling an “old order” for ammunition, and she indicated that arms were offloaded, not loaded onto the ship.

The South African government, a key partner for the U.S. in Africa, has stated numerous times it has a neutral position on the war in Ukraine and wants the conflict resolved peacefully.

But recent displays of its closeness to Russia opened Africa’s most developed country to accusations that it has effectively taken Russia’s side.

South Africa’s ruling African National Congress Party, which is led by Ramaphosa, sent a delegation to Moscow last month and spoke of strengthening ties with Russia, further straining the country’s relationship with the U.S.

South Africa also hosted Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov for talks in January, around a month after the alleged visit by the Lady R, giving him a platform to blame the West for the war in Ukraine.

Military drills with Russia, China

Weeks later, South Africa allowed warships from the Russian and Chinese navies to perform drills off its east coast.

The Russian navy brought its Admiral Gorshkov frigate, one of its flagship vessels. The South African navy also took part in the drills and characterized them as exercises that would “strengthen the already flourishing relations between South Africa, Russia and China.”

WATCH | ICC chief on importance of holding Putin to account:

Putin arrest warrant a signal to the world that actions have consequences, says ICC president

‘We treat these arrest warrants as a kind of sanction — the person under the arrest warrant cannot leave the territory …without taking a risk to be arrested,’ says International Criminal Court president and judge Piotr Hofmański.

South Africa’s decision to stage those naval drills in February, which coincided with the one-year anniversary of the start of the war in Ukraine, raised “serious concerns” for the U.S., Brigety was quoted as saying Thursday.

At the time of the drills, the South African armed forces said they were planned years ago before Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

South Africa also faces a diplomatic dilemma over a possible visit this year by Russian President Vladimir Putin, who is the subject of an International Criminal Court arrest warrant for alleged war crimes involving the abductions of children from Ukraine.

Putin is due to visit South Africa in August for a meeting of leaders of the BRICS economic bloc, which is made up of Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa.

South Africa is a signatory to the international war crimes court and therefore obliged to arrest Putin. But the government has indicated it will not detain the Russian leader and has threatened to leave the ICC instead.

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