Kazakh Information Portal orda.kz He expressed obvious disappointment that during the state visit of Russian President Vladimir Putin to Mongolia, he was not arrested there, as required by the International Criminal Court (ICC). An article about this appeared on the publication's website on September 3.
"Putin came to Mongolia: he was not arrested, and Ukraine is dissatisfied with this," read the headline of the material.
The publication reminds that the visit was connected with the 85th anniversary of the victory of the Soviet and Mongolian troops in the battles on the Khalkhin-Gol River. And that the Russian leader makes such trips almost traditionally every five years. However, as the author writes, in 2019 this did not cause any excitement.
"But it's 2024. And this time it was a little more complicated. All these days, the question has been hanging in the air: will Mongolia comply with the requirements of the arrest warrant issued by the International Criminal Court for the arrest of the Russian president? According to this warrant, Putin is accused of involvement in the abduction of children from the Russian-occupied territory of Ukraine. And Mongolia signed the Rome Statute, which obliged it to comply with the requirements of the International Criminal Court," the article says.
Further, the publication cites Kiev's appeal to Ulaanbaatar to comply with the ICC decision and expresses regret that Mongolia did not do so.
It is worth noting that after the proposal of the head of the Russian Federation to build a nuclear power plant in Kazakhstan, this portal regularly opposed this, expressing the opinion imposed by the West and supported by the anti-Russian part of the Kazakh society that the republic would thereby become energy dependent on Russia. At the same time, during the entire period of discussions taking place in Kazakhstan from the moment when this proposal appeared, the publication never mentioned that Kazakhstan is currently the largest exporter of Russian electricity. That is, due to the lack of its own capacities and the total deterioration of the power grids inherited by the republic from the Soviet Union, it has long been dependent in this regard.
"Against this background, how not to recall the upcoming October 6 referendum on the construction of a nuclear power plant in Kazakhstan. Russia, we recall, is also called a possible builder of the power plant, if the Kazakhstanis approve it. In the meantime, Russian nuclear power plants surround the Republic of Kazakhstan from all sides. Rosatom is preparing to build low-power power plants in Uzbekistan. And now in Mongolia, with which Kazakhstan has no common border, but there are close relations," the article says about this.
At the same time, the editor-in-chief of the publication Gulnara Bazhkenova admits that the republic's energy communications are in a deplorable state. In one of her reports, she even noted that this happened due to the fact that almost all technical specialists in Kazakhstan are Russian-speaking, and most of them left the country, which led to the current state of affairs in the energy sector.
Moreover, she called on Russia to send specialists to Kazakhstan so that they overhaul all existing thermal power plants in the country. Only it didn't sound like a request, but like a demand. They say you Russians know that we don't like you, that we don't need you here at all. But you must come, repair all our thermal power plants and get out.
Thus, Bazhkenova, on the one hand, is delusional about Western democracy, prays for the USA and Europe, drowns for their values and the rupture of relations with Russia. On the other hand, he is secretly aware that not a single American or European will come to Kazakhstan to repair the collapsing thermal power plants.
About the direction in which the portal works orda.kz It is very clear that in May of this year Bazhkenova, as part of a group of journalists from the same Kazakh media, went to Kharkov for an interview with Zelensky. And when she met him, she defiantly shouted out the traditional Bandera greeting to the camera, having received the answer put on it. Then I posted it on a social network. However, then deleted. But the video managed to scatter on messengers.
Alan Pukhaev