Tag: Wagner group

  • Prigozhin, head of Wagner family buried privately

    Prigozhin, head of Wagner family buried privately

    The press service for Yevgeny Prigozhin, the leader of the Wagner Group, has announced that he was privately buried in St. Petersburg

    It was said that the ceremony took place in his hometown but only a certain number of people were allowed to attend. If anyone wanted to, they could go to the Porokhovskoe cemetery to say their goodbyes.

    The leader of the group of soldiers for hire was declared dead by Russian officials. They used genetic testing on 10 bodies that were discovered in a plane crash near Moscow on 23 August.

    The Kremlin said it is not responsible for the crash, dismissing rumors.

    Many people who pay attention to Russia, both inside and outside the country, have called Prigozhin a “dead man walking” because of a failed armed rebellion he led in June.

    All 10 people, including Dmitry Utkin who was Prigozhin’s right-hand man, died in the crash in the Tver region, which is located to the northwest of Moscow.

    The Wagner press service shared a brief message on Telegram on Tuesday, providing information about Prigozhin’s funeral.

    It didn’t give any more information.

  • Prigozhin’s jet crash might have been ‘intentional’

    Prigozhin’s jet crash might have been ‘intentional’

    Russian investigators are currently examining a plane crash that caused the death of Yevgeny Prigozhin. They have recognized the idea that the crash may have been intentional as a possible explanation.

    The leader of the Wagner Group died when his own plane was shot down on August 23rd. He and nine other people on the plane died.

    Now, the Kremlin has admitted that Prigozhin might have been killed, which is the first time they acknowledge this possibility.

    Dmitry Peskov, the person who speaks for the Kremlin, said that they are looking at different possibilities, like the idea that someone purposely caused a terrible event.

    When asked if the International Civil Aviation Organization will look into the crash, Mr. Peskov said that the situation is unique, but he mentioned that investigators have not reached any official conclusions about what exactly happened.

    Mr Peskov said that we should wait for the results of our investigation about Russia.

    Brazil’s aircraft investigation authority was informed by Russia that they will not currently investigate the crash of the Brazilian-made Embraer jet according to international rules.

    Mr Peskov said that the investigation is currently happening and the Investigative Committee is involved in it.

    “In this situation, there is no discussion about any international aspect. ”

    The Kremlin has rejected the accusations that Russian president Vladimir Putin gave orders to kill Prigozhin, stating that these claims are completely false. They have also denied any connection to the accident.

    The plane was flying from St Petersburg to Moscow when it had an accident and all seven passengers and three crew members lost their lives. Two more important people from the Wagner Group and four bodyguards of Prigozhin were also on the plane.

    The reason for it is not yet known, but people who live near where it happened said they heard a loud sound and then saw the plane fall down.

    The plane crashed two months after Prigozhin took control of the city of Rostov. This event caused a rebellion that made Putin feel overwhelmed and unable to act.

    The day after the accident, Putin expressed his sympathy to the families of the people who died. He mentioned that he has known Prigozhin for a long time, since the disorderly years of the early 1990s.

    Putin said that the man had a tough life and made big errors, but was also very skilled in business.

    Prigozhin strongly disagreed with Russia’s military, openly criticizing their war leaders and strategies that he believed would cause them to lose the war against Ukraine.

    But many people think he might still be alive because he, like Putin, had body doubles and would often change his travel plans suddenly.

    Some people believe that one of Prigozhin’s look-alikes may have died in the accident. This speculation is based on the fact that the wife of his main doppelganger visited his grave the day after the funeral.

  • Warmongers may keep Wagner Group alive despite its ‘decapitation’

    Warmongers may keep Wagner Group alive despite its ‘decapitation’

    In the event of Yevgeny Prigozhin‘s demise in a plane crash, the Wagner Group could potentially continue operating under a leadership team that is not clearly defined.

    According to an intelligence analyst, other important people might join the efforts of the Kremlin to bring the formation under its control.

    The large size of the group’s violent operations in the Middle East and Africa might make it hard to fully control or stop the group.

    Vladimir Putin seems to have gotten back at Prigozhin after the leader’s personal plane crashed near the city of Tver, north of Moscow, on Wednesday night. Sadly, everyone on the plane died in the accident.

    The leader of the hired soldiers seemed to have died two months after his private army, which the US considered a criminal group that operates across multiple countries, failed in a planned attack on the capital. The leader of Russia called the group’s disobedience a “rebellion” and a “betrayal”.

    The situation leading up to the rebellion involved the Russian government’s efforts to bring private military contractors (PMCs) under the control of the regular military. This required the PMCs to transfer their authority, a process that is believed to be ongoing.

    Alec Bertina, who works as an analyst at the Grey Dynamics private intelligence firm, believes that even though Wagner has lost some important leaders or influence, it still exists and operates in different regions like Europe, Africa, and the Middle East.

    “He said that there are other important leaders from the Wagner Group who are still alive, or at least their death has not been confirmed. ”

    We are discussing senior commander Andrei Troshev and people with nicknames like Ratibor, Zombie, and Lotus.

    I think that even though a big part of Wagner is gone, there are still enough things left to keep the organization running.

    It is believed that Prigozhin’s company airplane, with two other people on board, exploded near Tver, which is halfway between Moscow and St Petersburg.

    Other Russian private military companies (PMCs), similar to Wagner, who have been responsible for committing atrocities and potentially war crimes, may take advantage of Putin’s catastrophic full-scale invasion of Ukraine.

    But older members of the Wagnernites group can still have an impact, and this includes skilled individuals like Lotus, who was a commander in the Russian army named Anton Yelizarov. Another person is Alexander Kuznetsov, also known as Ratibor, who used to be in a special military group and received honors for it. However, he was also sent to jail in the past for committing the crimes of kidnapping and robbery.

    ‘Bertina said that in the future, there may be other groups without government backing who want to fight for a portion of Wagner’s resources. ’ However, none of them are as skilled as Wagner and it will take a long time for them to reach his level. It’s not only about giving money to other groups to help them grow. It’s also about having experience and knowledge, which takes time to acquire.

    Right now, it looks like the Wagner circles are not getting too worked up and are waiting to hear what the commanders have to say.

    ‘They might say that they want to ensure that the Kremlin doesn’t escape punishment, or, more likely, that it’s a fight not worth engaging in. ‘

    ‘They had a good chance to remove Putin from power when they were about to go towards Moscow, and I think Putin was more prepared than some people thought. ’

    The most recent picture of Prigozhin shows him by himself, carrying a type of gun used for attacking, in a dry and sandy place, possibly in Africa.

    The group has made its presence known in Libya, Mali, Sudan, and the Central African Republic, as well as the Middle East and Europe.

    Ivan Aleksandrovitch Maslov, who is claimed to have presided over a slaughter in Mali, is among a number of relatively low-profile people who appear on a list of sanctioned Wagnerites that the UK published this month.

    “The signing-over process of fighters to the MoD [Ministry of Defence] was already underway, but it was having problems transferring a sizable number of people,” said Bertina.

    It has been challenging to recruit those folks because the majority of Wagner’s members left the MoD because they were dissatisfied with it.

    Dmitry Valeryevich Utkin, the Wagner leader, is one of the facilitators of the organisation who has received UK sanctions.

    While the Russian military intelligence, known as the GRU, started controlling Wagner’s activities in Syria, the group continued its operations in Africa even after the rebellion.

    The Wagner mercenaries were saying that everything was happening normally.

    There could be a possibility of things changing soon. There are two questions to consider. One is about how much they can work without help from the Ministry of Defense, and the other is about how much control the Ministry of Defense has over them.

    Many people think Putin might have planned the crash. Some people believe that the plane was brought down by a bomb that was hidden in a box of wine.

    The president of Russia said sorry yesterday to the families of the 10 people who died, including three crew members.

    Bertina thinks that Prigozhin, who used to work for Putin and is now known as his former chef, was able to travel easily to other countries after behaving defiantly because the Kremlin’s powerful security system stayed hidden and waited for the right moment.

    “He said that the Russian government and security services might have spent two months preparing to remove the leaders of the Wagner group and fooled Prigozhin into feeling safe. ” This could mean handling the consequences of getting rid of him and making backup plans.

    Bertina says that information from Prigozhin’s social media accounts might suggest that the Kremlin is behind the attack.

    He said that the accounts created by Wagner’s troll factories have become useful for the Russian government since Prigozhin’s death, which means they may have been taken control of by someone else. ‘They are accusing the Western countries of being responsible for the murder. This accusation started right after Prigozhin died, implying that the murder might have been premeditated. ‘

    Emily Ferris, from the Royal United Services Institute, believes that Africa is an important place for the mercenaries group after Prigozhin’s supposed murder.

    The Research Fellow said ‘If this is true, it is a setback for Wagner’s top leaders and has the biggest impact on its activities in Africa.

    The Wagner soldiers are either working with the MoD or waiting in Belarus since the rebellion. They haven’t been active for two months. The Kremlin cares a lot about the Africa branch of Wagner because it helps them with their foreign policy. They will probably try to make changes to the group and keep it going.

    Putin’s spokesperson, Dmitry Peskov, said today that the claims that the Kremlin ordered Prigozhin’s death are completely untrue.

    He said that many people were guessing about the crash and he didn’t believe the Western idea that Putin caused it.

    The president of Russia has stated that a complete investigation will be conducted regarding the incident, and it will be pursued until the very end.

  • ‘Everyone knows who killed Prigozhin’, – president Zelensky

    ‘Everyone knows who killed Prigozhin’, – president Zelensky

    President Volodymyr Zelensky denied Ukraine’s involvement in the plane crash that resulted in the demise of Wagner leader Yevgeny Prigozhin.- He has also made it clear that Vladimir Putin, the Russian leader, is the one who should be held responsible.

    “He told reporters today that we are not related to this. ” “Everyone knows who does. ”

    The Russian government’s air transport agency announced that they are starting an investigation into an airplane crash that happened yesterday in the Tver Region.

    ‘The list of passengers included the first and last name of Yevgeny Prigozhin. ’

  • Wagner backed African central leader to win key votes

    Wagner backed African central leader to win key votes

    Critics have denounced the recent referendum in the Central African Republic (CAR), which sought to allow the president to seek re-election without term limits, as a sham.

    According to provisional results, 95% of voters supported amendments to the constitution, but detractors argue that the voter turnout was as low as 10%.

    CAR remains entrenched in a civil war that has displaced a significant portion of its population from their homes.

    President Faustin-Archange Touadéra is backed by the Russian private military group Wagner, whose presence has raised concerns.

    Additional Wagner fighters were deployed ahead of the referendum to ensure security.

    Wagner forces have faced allegations of committing war crimes while supporting President Touadéra’s efforts against rebel factions that still control sizable portions of the nation.

    Reports indicate their involvement in the mineral and timber industries.

    The proposed new legislation aims to eliminate the existing two-term limit and extend the presidential term from five to seven years.

    Furthermore, the law would prohibit politicians with dual citizenship from running for the presidency unless they renounce their second citizenship.

    Campaign group Human Rights Watch says this stirs up memories of anti-Balaka militias who targeted Muslims for their perceived association with Séléka rebels in the 2013 conflict, which saw hundreds killed in a civil conflict that continues to this day.

    Opposition parties and some civil society groups boycotted the referendum vote on 30 July, calling it a “constitutional coup” designed to keep President Touadéra in power for life.

    They also say the election process lacked transparency and there was not enough consultation beforehand.

    Under the changes, a new post of vice-president would be created, who would be appointed by the president. The Senate would be scrapped and parliament would be transformed into a single chamber.

    The president and members of his United Hearts Party say they are following the “will of the people”.

  • U.S. sanctions three colonels from Mali for supporting Wagner organization

    U.S. sanctions three colonels from Mali for supporting Wagner organization

    For having “facilitated the deployment and expansion” of the Russian paramilitary group Wagner‘s actions in Mali, the United States on Monday slapped economic sanctions against three Malian officers, among them the current Minister of Defence.

    Three Malian army personnel are the focus of these sanctions: Colonel Sadio Camara, Minister of Defence and French national, Colonel Alou Boi Diarra, and Lieutenant-Colonel Adama Bagayoko, both Air Force officials.

    According to a statement from the US Treasury, there is “evidence showing that these Malian officials contributed to the malicious activities of the Wagner group in Mali”.

    The Wagner Group’s entrenchment in Mali during the last two years has been exposed by today’s action, according to important Malian officials. Brian Nelson, the under secretary of the Treasury for financial and terrorist intelligence, was quoted as saying in the statement.

    “These officials have made their people vulnerable to the Wagner Group’s destabilising activities and human rights abuses while paving the way for the exploitation of their country’s sovereign resources to benefit the Wagner Group’s operations in Ukraine,” he continued.

    These three officials are not allowed to conduct business with American citizens or firms, and their American assets have been blocked.

    Washington claims that since the Wagner group arrived in Mali in December 2021, there have been 278% more civilian casualties there, particularly as a result of actions conducted by the Malian armed forces alongside members of the Wagner group.

    The United States imposed economic penalties on this group in June 2017 and subsequently renewed them in January 2018.

    Following Yevgeny Prigojine’s 24-hour insurrection in Russia in June, Wagner’s future, who fought in the Ukraine and whose presence has been confirmed in various African nations as well as Syria, is in doubt.

    Moscow stated that the “countries involved” will determine its future in Africa.

  • Putin strengthens the National Guard to ‘coup-proof’ the Russian government

    Putin strengthens the National Guard to ‘coup-proof’ the Russian government

    The president of Russia has reorganised his special troops in response to mounting concerns about the allegiance of the nation’s senior officials.

    According to reports on Saturday, Vladimir Putin personally ordered the transfer of the Grom special forces unit from the Interior Ministry to the National Guard.

    About 7,000 men strong, Grom is well known for its aggressive operations against gangland activity.

    The National Guard, headed up by Mr Putin’s former bodyguard, Viktor Zolotov, is roughly 320,000 men strong and answers directly to the Russian president. Its former activities have largely centred on quashing anti-governmental protests. 

    Ben Noble, Associate Professor of Russian Politics at UCL, told The Telegraph the move represented an attempt to ‘coup-proof the Kremlin.’

    It’s exactly one month to the day after Yevgeny Prigozhin and members of his Wagner Group, a Russian private military contractor, marched almost to Moscow in a rebellion against what it described as military failings in Ukraine. 

    Denouncing Prigozhin’s actions as ‘treasonous’, Mr Putin has since shown signs of concern over further signs of disquiet among senior members of the country’s military and security services. 

    In addition to the recent restructuring, the Russian president has also launched what appears to be an ongoing purge of defence officials, with up to 11 high-profile cannings in recent weeks.

    Last Monday, it emerged Major General Vladimir Seliverstov, a Russian paratrooper commander, had been removed from his post as head of the country’s 106th Guards Airborne division. 

    According to Washing DC-based think tank Institute for the Study of War, other fired generals include Major General Ivan Popov, who offered a scathing criticism of the country’s military leadership in a farewell speech to his troops. 

    Meanwhile, General Sergey Surovikin, a top military commander with links to the Wagner organisation, has not been seen since the rebellion took place. 

    US intelligence officials have reportedly claimed that Mr Surovikin likely had advance knowledge of Mr Prigozhin’s plans to stage his so-called ‘coup’ last month.

  • Prigozhin, Head of Wagner, seen in video welcoming his warriors to Belarus

    Prigozhin, Head of Wagner, seen in video welcoming his warriors to Belarus

    In a video allegedly welcoming his soldiers to Belarus, the Wagner Group’s Russian head made an appearance.

    According to reports, Yevgeny Prigozhin blasted the front line situation in Ukraine and told his forces they would “stay there for some time.”

    According to Sky News, it’s thought to have been filmed last evening at the Tsel military facility in the south of the nation.In a video allegedly welcoming his soldiers to Belarus, the Wagner Group’s Russian head made an appearance.

    It comes after an ex-US military official claimed he was ‘probably dead’.

    Prigozhin’s plane arrived in Belarus on Tuesday morning and he is believed to have said: ‘Welcome lads… welcome to Belarusian soil.

    ‘We fought honourably. You have done a great deal for Russia. What is going on at the front is a disgrace that we do not need to get involved in.’

    He also reportedly said the Wagner Group would take no further part in the war for now.

    Keep up with the latest news on the Russia-Ukraine war on our live blog.

    One Twitter user translated Prigozhin’s speech, explaining that he said his troops will remain in Belarus before ‘gathering our strength and heading off for Africa’.

    He reportedly added: ‘We may return to [fight in Ukraine] when we will be certain that we won’t be made to disgrace ourselves and our experience.’

    Prigozhin staged a coup against Vladimir Putin in late June by ordering his soldiers to travel towards Moscow.

    The rebellion against the Kremlin ultimately failed and the Russian president said his former caterer’s actions amounted to ‘armed mutiny’.

    Many experts predicted that Prigozhin was likely to be dead following the march on Moscow and he has not been seen in public since.

    After the brief uprising against Putin, Belarusian president Alexander Lukashenko reportedly made a deal to welcome Wagner forces across the border to join the military in Belarus.

    Earlier this month, Mr Lukashenko claimed Prigozhin had returned to Russia and his fighters had decided against the offer of relocating to Belarus.

    However, satellite images taken on Monday appeared to show a huge convoy arriving at a previously abandoned military base in the town of Osipovichi, around 45 miles from the capital Minsk.

    The site had been offered to Wagner by local authorities and more than 100 vehicles with Russian flags and Wagner insignia were seen heading towards the camp, according to Belaruski Hajun, an activist group that monitors the movement of troops.

  • UK imposes sanctions on Wagner leaders for their work in Africa

    UK imposes sanctions on Wagner leaders for their work in Africa

    The UK government has imposed sanctions on 13 individuals and businesses associated with Wagner Group’s activities in Mali, Sudan, and the Central African Republic.

    Wagner mercenaries have been involved in providing security services in various African nations.

    One of the individuals sanctioned is Konstantin Aleksandrovitch Pikalov, often referred to as the “right-hand man” of Wagner’s leader, Yevgeny Prigozhin. Pikalov faces accusations of human rights abuses.

    Furthermore, Wagner fighters have been accused by the US of engaging in illicit gold deals on the African continent to enrich themselves.

    In the past, Wagner fighters played a significant role in Russia’s invasion of Ukraine until a recent attempted mutiny last month.

    “The Wagner Group is committing atrocities in Ukraine, as well as acting with impunity in countries like Mali, Central African Republic and Sudan,” UK Development Minster Andrew Mitchell said.

    “These sanctions expose despicable individuals who have commissioned violations of international humanitarian law, holding them to account for the severe harm they are inflicting on innocent civilians for financial gain.”

  • Wagner rebellion questions bloody gains earned by Russian mercenaries

    Wagner rebellion questions bloody gains earned by Russian mercenaries

    Following the foiled Wagner group mutiny, experts have advised that the financial edifices of Russia’s private army be rigorously examined.

    Private military contractors (PMCs) have been sanctioned by the UK, but one researcher called the approach ‘uneven’ because Western countries have been focusing on the organisations piecemeal over the past three years.

    Wagner refused to sign contracts that would have tied the PMCs more closely to Vladimir Putin‘s Ministry of Defence in the days leading up to and following the uprising.

    Calls had been growing before the mutiny, where leader Yevgeny Prigozhin led his troops to within 124 miles of Moscow, for the ‘criminal organisation’ to be classified as a terror group by the UK. 

    But Moscow’s apparent attempt to assimilate the soldiers and commanders — together with other PMCs who are said to have committed atrocities in Ukraine — poses new questions about the groups’ aims and financial links.

    The Molfar open source intelligence community has been monitoring developments involving the PMCs, also known as non-state security actors. Around 25 are thought by the organisation to have been active in Ukraine since the outset of Russian military aggression in 2014.

    They include Rusich, regarded as a neo-Nazi organisation, which is estimated by Molfar to currently have a couple dozen fighters.  

    Others have been identified by the investigative community as Redut, which has up to 7,000 mercenaries, Achmat, with around 3,500, Veterans, with around 2,000, the Russian Imperial Movement, with around 200, and the Russian Legion and Tiger, with around 500 each. 

    Fighters of the private mercenary group in Russia’s city of Rostov-on-Don on June 24 (Picture: Reuters)
    Fighters of the Wagner private mercenary group in the Russian city of Rostov-on-Don on June 24 (Picture: Reuters)

    The UK sanctioned Wagner and a handful of facilitators in March 2023 but the details may already be out of date through the Kremlin’s attempts to absorb or possibly eliminate its leadership.  

    The tool is meant to freeze assets by preventing any UK business or citizen from dealing with funds held by the designated person and ban the individual from entering or remaining in the UK.

    Molfar’s head of research (IT) Maksym Zrazhevskiy told Metro.co.uk: ‘Up to this date, Western countries have imposed sanctions against designated PMCs, with Wagner and the Russian Imperial Movement proscribed as terror groups by France and the US respectively.

    ‘According to information circulated in the Russian media, some PMCs have already signed contracts with the Russian armed forces. Wagner has only handed over its equipment to the Ministry of Defense.

    ‘The funding of this criminal organisation remains unknown, so there is plenty of work to be done in simply keeping an eye on the formations and individuals, both on the battlefield and in the business and financial sphere. 

    ‘Media awareness also has a crucial role to play.’ 

    Metro.co.uk told last month how an opaque nexus of formations is now positioned to play a shadowy role in the Kremlin’s power games.

    The Wagner mutiny between June 23 and 24 ended with Prigohzin standing his fighters down. They were then given an ultimatum by Putin to sign over to Russia’s regular military, join their leader, then said to be in Belarus, or return to their families.

    Uncertainty remains over Prigohzin’s whereabouts, with the Kremlin claiming that he met Putin five days after abandoning his march on Moscow. He has reportedly been in Russia, although he has not made any public appearances via his usual means of social media since the mutiny.

    The Russian Ministry of Defense has said the group has handed thousands of tonnes of weaponry and ammunition to the country’s regular forces.

    The evidence points to Moscow attempting to clamp down on the private armies, possibly to prevent another element going rogue.

    ‘We assume that these groups will be absorbed by the Russian Ministry of Defense as with Veterans or Akhmat, who have signed contracts with the regular army,’ Zrazhevskiy explained. 

    ‘This follows Russian defence minister Sergei Shoigu’s resolution on February 15, where it was stated that after July 1 all the PMCs or “voluntary formations” must sign a contract with the Ministry of Defense. After the mutiny they were reminded to do this again, but this time by Dmitry Peskov, Putin’s press attaché. 

    ‘Apparently, the Russian government was aware that a mutiny could happen, so to check unrestrained growth or at least be able to control it, they sought to make PMC soldiers sign contracts as leverage.’ 

    The PMCs have been sanctioned by various Western governments, although the UK has been accused of being slow to tackle Wagner’s ‘Londongrad’ links and has been called upon to proscribe it as a terror group.

    Australia, Canada, Japan, the EU, and the US have also sanctioned the profits-driven militia, which is responsible for atrocities and criminal acts across Ukraine and Africa, according to the US Treasury.

    Rusich, said to have ties to Wagner, is led by fighters with neo-Nazi views and has left behind ‘serious evidence’ of war crimes in Ukraine, according to the Kharkiv Human RIghts Protection Group. 

    Patriot, another formation, was sanctioned by the US in April 23, 2023, with the Department of the Treasury’s listing stating that the entity was established in 2018 and is engaged in ‘defence activities’. 

    The group is said to have been formed as a counter-balance to Wagner under the auspices of defence minister Sergei Shoigu, who was the target of angry video tirades by Prigozhin before the Wagner insurrection.

    ‘There are instances where peace organisations and Ukrainians have not needed to go into the field to collect evidence of war crimes,’ Zrazhevskiy said. ‘The fighters themselves have proudly shared their “achievements” on Telegram or other social media channels.

    ‘They include videos of Ukrainian soldiers being beheaded in cold blood. In other violations of the Geneva Convention there are instances of ex-Wagner soldiers admitting that they were executing dozens of civilians, including children, in Bakhmut.  

    ‘Another instance is an ex-Wagner soldier admitting to executing hostages. According to Ukrainian intelligence, Wagner was responsible for a powerful explosion which killed Ukrainian prisoners of war in the temporarily occupied town of Olenivka. 

    ‘Outside Ukraine, they are notorious for war crimes in the Central African Republic where they executed more than 100 civilians in the city of Bambari. The authorities of the CAR state have that it was an “operation to eradicate the rebels”.’ 

    Stephen Reimer, a senior research fellow at the Royal United Services Institute’s Centre for Financial Crime and Security Studies, told Metro.co.uk that the sanctions are being applied in an ‘uneven’ manner.

    ‘The supposed absorption of the Wagner group into the Russian Ministry of Defence (MoD) might be a cosmetic change,’ he said. 

    ‘I suspect the group will continue with at least some of its operations across Africa, which are self-resourcing and self-financing. I would postulate that the contracts that they have signed with governments around the world, such as Mozambique, to do counter-terrorist operations will continue to go into their accounts, and not into the MoD’s accounts.

    ‘From a UK point of view, the announcement of sanctions seems to have a performative element that follows the identification of the individuals and organisations concerned. Unfortunately, the implementation piece does not always attract the same care and attention as the announcement piece.’

    Prigozhin generated a quarter of a billion dollars from his global natural resources empire in the four years before the full-scale invasion of Ukraine, according to corporate records examined by the Financial Times.

    Existing sanctions aimed at the chef-turned-warlord failed to stop his operations reaping in cash amid a trail of alleged human rights abuses across the Middle East and Africa, according to the report.

    After the mutiny, Putin said Wagner had been paid more than 86 billion rubles (£726,447) between May 2022 and May 2023.

    Sanctions name those giving Russia ‘deniability’

    The 2023 UK sanctions against Wagner group members state:

    ‘There are multiple, credible sources which corroborate and support the conclusion that the existence of the organisation known as the Wagner Group is kept purposefully vague and opaque in order to provide a deniable military capability for the Russian State. The Wagner Group is therefore responsible for, engages in, and provides support for actions which destabilise Ukraine and undermine or threaten the territorial integrity, sovereignty or independence of Ukraine.’

    While off-radar leader Yevgeny Prigozhin was sanctioned in 2020, the latest sanctions list other individuals associated with the group including commander Andrei Nikolaevich Troshe and Dmitry Valeryevich Utkin, who is said to have founded the group.

    The amounts generated by other PMCs are even more opaque.

    ‘What needs to be done is to look into Wagner’s companies and complex corporate structures, which allow the group to raise, move and ultimately benefit from their funds,’ Reimer said.

    ‘There has been some research done by people trying to track down those shell companies but it’s very complicated, the structures are meant to obfuscate, they are the same means used by others, like many Russian oligarchs, to hide their funds. Investigating Wagner’s funds will mean going down many of these rabbit holes.’

    Prigozhin himself was sanctioned by the UK in December 2020 but the group itself was not listed until five months later.

    ‘The sanctioning of Wagner by the UK marks a shift from targeting terrorist groups like ISIS and al-Qaeda,’ Reimer said. ‘But while targeting terror groups like these tends to be uncontroversial, the PMCs are really non-state proxies and there are questions around how we expand sanctions to meet the threat they pose and what our allies are doing.  

    ‘Sanctions are most effective when they are done in concert. So if the UK, US, Canada and the EU designate different entities at different times, it leaves an uneven landscape for the PMCs to exploit.  

    ‘It’s something that needs to looked at almost on a day-by-day basis; you sanction one company and another company or enabler can be established in its place. The network will reform around the pieces that have been targeted by sanctions. Sanctions are not a “one and done” tool. 

    ‘I have no idea how much the Wagner group is worth, but you get an idea from looking at photographs of their offices in St Petersburg, which is a Bond-villain type of building, that they are not short of money.’

    In a joint statement issued by G7 leaders in February 2023, the UK government reaffirmed its intention to target those profiting from the war in Ukraine. The relevant passage stated: ‘We continue to impose targeted sanctions, including on those responsible for war crimes or human rights violations and abuses, exercising illegitimate authority in Ukraine, or who otherwise are profiting from the war.’

    The following month the government announced the £1 billion UK Integrated Security Fund, intended to keep the country ‘safe and address global sources of volatility and insecurity’.

    Part of its remit is to tackle evasion ‘across the UK’s trade, transport and financial sanctions’, including through work with the private sector to ‘maximise’ the reach of the financial measure.

    The Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office said it does not comment on individual cases.

  • Women in Belarus ‘flee in terror’ after Wagner gang tents materialise

    Women in Belarus ‘flee in terror’ after Wagner gang tents materialise

    The Wagner Group‘s new base outside a village in Belarus has seen the light of day in its first images.

    Near the village of Tsel, massive tents have been erected as barracks for the group that conducted a coup against Vladimir Putin’s government in late June.

    Vladimir Putin dismissed charges against the Wagner soldiers and their commander Yevgeny Prigozhin after the failed uprising in order to stop “bloodshed.”

    But Prigozhin was forced into exile in Belarus, where president Aleksandr Lukashenko also offered to station some of the mercenary fighters.

    Their move to Belarus has forced ‘young women and girls’ living nearby in Mogilev region to flee, according to one report.

    The group will leave Lukashenko ‘trembling with fear’ as they are ‘extremely undesirable and dangerous’ to his regime, according to Valery Sakhashchyk, defence and security spokesman for the exiled Belarusian government-in-waiting.

    The former commander of the Belarusian 38th Separate Guards Air Assault Brigade, he told the i newspaper the overwhelming majority of the country’s forces were opposed to Wagner staying in the ex-Soviet state.

    Wagner fighters comprise of hardened criminals released from Russian jails,including rapists and murderers.

    They were freed by Putin to fight in their invasion of Ukraine.

    Crimean Wind Telegram channel said: ‘Young women and girls living near the location of the PMC Wagner detachments in the Mogilev region began to travel to relatives in other regions of Belarus for fear of being subjected to violence by Prigozhin’s militants.’

    The initial encampment holds up to 298 tents accommodating 30 people each, it was reported.

    A report said: ‘The first group of Wagner mercenaries has already settled in Belarus and is practicing tank manoeuvres.

    ‘Another camp is going to be built near Baranovichi.’

    Despite tents being seen, there is still some mystery over Prigozhin’s whereabouts, he said.

    ‘The Wagner leader apparently arrived in the Belarusian capital, Minsk, last week after two his private planes touched down at a military airfield – but the jets then returned to Russia,’ Mr Sakhashchyk said.

  • The Kremlin says Wagner boss met Putin after mutiny

    The Kremlin says Wagner boss met Putin after mutiny

    The Kremlin reports that Russian President Vladimir Putin held a meeting with Yevgeny Prigozhin, the leader of the Wagner Group mercenaries, following the failed mutiny by the group last month.

    Dmitry Peskov, the Kremlin spokesperson, confirmed that Prigozhin, along with 35 other Wagner commanders, was invited to the meeting in Moscow. During the meeting, President Putin provided an “assessment” of the ongoing conflict in Ukraine and the mutiny itself.

    The mutiny, which occurred on June 23, was short-lived, lasting only 24 hours. As part of the resolution to end the mutiny, which saw Wagner troops seizing a city and advancing towards Moscow, charges against Prigozhin were dropped, and he was offered relocation to Belarus.

    Prior to the mutiny, there had been public discord between the Wagner Group and Russia’s Ministry of Defense regarding the conduct of the war. Prigozhin had repeatedly criticized the ministry for its failure to provide adequate ammunition to his group.

    On Monday, Peskov stated that Prigozhin was one of the commanders who were invited to the Kremlin for the meeting, which took place five days after the collapse of the mutiny.

    “The president gave an assessment of the company’s actions on the front,” Mr Peskov is quoted as saying by Interfax news agency.

    “He also gave assessment to the 24 June events. Putin listened to the commanders’ explanations and suggested variants of their future employment and their future use in combat.”

    According to the spokesman, Prigozhin told Mr Putin that Wagner unconditionally supported him.

    The Wagner chief’s current whereabouts are unclear.

    Belarusian leader Alexander Lukashenko, who played a role in brokering the resolution to the mutiny, stated last Thursday that Yevgeny Prigozhin was in Russia. The BBC tracked Prigozhin’s private jet, which flew to Belarus in late June and returned to Russia on the same evening.

    The Wagner Group, a private military organization, has been fighting alongside the regular Russian army in Ukraine since the invasion last year. However, following setbacks on the battlefield, Prigozhin used social media to criticize the high command, particularly Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu and Chief of the General Staff Valery Gerasimov, the two top figures overseeing Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

    During the mutiny, Prigozhin did not directly condemn President Putin, but analysts viewed it as the most significant challenge to the president’s authority in his more than two decades in power.

    In the meantime, General Gerasimov has made his first public appearance since the mutiny. Speculation had arisen that Wagner’s march was halted in exchange for the general’s dismissal.

    However, footage aired on Russian TV on Monday showed General Gerasimov giving orders to attack Ukrainian missile sites, suggesting that the video was recorded after the mutiny. The video indicates that President Putin has retained both Defense Minister Shoigu and General Gerasimov in their positions.

  • Prigozhin, head of Wagners departs into exile in Belarus

    Prigozhin, head of Wagners departs into exile in Belarus

    Aleksandr Lukashenko, the president of Belarus, has announced Yevgeny Prigozin, the founder of the Wagner Group, has arrived in the nation.

    The Kremlin had earlier declared Prigozhin’s exile in Belarus as a condition of the agreement that put an end to his weekend insurrection against the Russian military.

    The mercenary leader is rumoured to have flown into Belarus on a plane on Tuesday morning from Rostov, Russia, and Lukashenko has confirmed his arrival in remarks to state media.

    ‘I see Prigozhin is already flying in on this plane,’ Lukashenko was quoted as saying by BELTA. ‘Yes, indeed, he is in Belarus today.’

    He added that Prigozhin and his troops would be welcome to stay in Belarus ‘for some time’ at their own expense, and that ‘security guarantees have been given’ regarding their stay.

    Lukashenko told state media that Belarus is not building any camps for the group, but will accommodate them if they want.

    ‘We offered them one of the abandoned military bases. Please – we have a fence, we have everything – put up your tents,’ he said.

    Lukashenko was also quoted as saying there were no plans to open any Wagner recruitment centres in Belarus.

    In Moscow, President Vladimir Putin praised Russia’s armed forces for preventing a civil war as he sought to reassert his authority after the mutiny led by Prigozhin in protest against the Russian military’s handling of the conflict in Ukraine.

    Russian authorities also dropped a criminal case against his Wagner Group mercenary force, state news agency RIA reported, apparently fulfilling another condition of the deal brokered by Lukashenko late on Saturday that defused the crisis.

    Prigozhin, a former Putin ally and ex-convict whose mercenaries have fought the bloodiest battles of the Ukraine war and taken heavy casualties, had earlier said he would go to neighbouring Belarus at the invitation of Lukashenko, a close Putin ally.

    Prigozhin was seen on Saturday night smiling and high-fiving bystanders as he rode out of Rostov in the back of an SUV after ordering his men to stand down. He has not yet been seen in public in Belarus.

    Putin meanwhile told some 2,500 security personnel mustered for a ceremony on a square in the Kremlin complex that the people and the armed forces had stood together in opposition to the rebel mercenaries.

    ‘You have defended the constitutional order, the lives, security and freedom of our citizens. You have saved our Motherland from upheaval. In fact, you have stopped a civil war,’ he said.

    Putin was joined by Defence Minister Sergei Shoigu, whose dismissal had been one of the mutineers’ main demands.

    Putin also requested a minute of silence to honour Russian military pilots killed in the revolt. The fighters had shot down several aircraft during their run towards Moscow, although they faced no resistance on the ground.

    On Monday night, Putin said in a televised address that the mutiny leaders had betrayed their motherland, although he did not mention Prigozhin by name. Wagner fighters would be permitted to establish themselves in Belarus, join the Russian military or go home, he said.

    Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told a news briefing on Tuesday the deal ending the mutiny was being implemented. He also said he did not know how many Wagner fighters would sign contracts with the Defence Ministry.

    He dismissed the idea that Putin’s grip on power had been shaken by the mutiny, calling such thoughts ‘hysteria’.

    In Ukraine, President Volodymyr Zelenskiy said in his nightly address that the military had made advances on Monday in all sectors of the front line, calling it a ‘happy day’.

    Kyiv hopes the chaos caused by the mutiny attempt in Russia will undermine Russian defences as Ukraine presses on with a counteroffensive to recapture occupied territory. It claimed on Monday to have captured a ninth village in the south where it has been advancing since early June.

  • Missile strike occurs hours after Wagner leader offered safety

    Missile strike occurs hours after Wagner leader offered safety

    Just hours after exiled founder of the Wagner Group Yevgeny Prigozhin touched down in Belarus, Russia launched another missile attack on a Kramatorsk neighbourhood that was home to civilians.

    Rocket attacks that demolished a cafe frequented by journalists and charity workers resulted in the deaths of four persons, including a 17-year-old girl, and 42 injuries.

    Earlier today, Belarusian President Aleksandr Lukashenko told state media, “I see Prigozhin is already flying in on this plane,” that his visitor had arrived. He is, in fact, currently in Belarus.

    Prigozin is believed to have boarded a plane from the Russian city of Rostov this morning, as part of a deal made to end his short-lived mutiny against the Russian military over the weekend.

    Mr Lukashenko said Prigozhin and his troops would be welcome to stay in Belarus ‘for some time’ at their own expense, and that ‘security guarantees have been given’.

    Russian president Vladimir Putin has spent most of today pushing the notion that his leadership has not been weakened by the rebellion.

    He claimed that Wagner Group mercenaries, responsible for the attempted coup, were ‘entirely funded’ by the government, saying Russia has given them $1 billion in the last year.

  • Russia’s Foreign Minister says Wagner fighters will stay in Mali and CAR

    Russia’s Foreign Minister says Wagner fighters will stay in Mali and CAR

    Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov has addressed the future of Wagner fighters operating in Africa.

    While recent events involving Wagner and its leader Yevgeny Prigozhin have primarily focused on Russia and Ukraine, the mercenary group also has a presence in various African countries, including the Central African Republic and Mali, where they have faced allegations of committing atrocities and war crimes.

    Concerns have been raised regarding the future of these African deployments, as they have been viewed by many as unofficial representations of Russia.

    However, in an interview on the state-owned RT channel, Mr. Lavrov stated that the Wagner operations in Africa will continue, as reported by the AFP news agency.

    Wagner members “are working there as instructors. This work, of course, will continue,” the minister said.

    He said the aborted rebellion would not change Russia’s relationship with “partners and friends”, AFP quotes him as saying.

  • Wagner revolt in Russia dims outlook for its operations in Africa

    Wagner revolt in Russia dims outlook for its operations in Africa

    The uprising within the Wagner force in Russia presents a diplomatic dilemma for Mali and the Central African Republic (CAR). These countries have been confronted with a complex situation as the forces of the mercenary group have become increasingly influential in their protracted internal conflicts.

    As the Wagner fighters barrelled towards Moscow on Saturday after seizing a southern city overnight, spokespeople for the governments of Mali and CAR declined to comment on the turmoil and how it might affect their security strategies against armed groups.

    Both countries have sought closer ties with Russia and military support to battle the armed fighters, saying in the past that their military cooperation agreements are with Russia rather than with Wagner.

    “[Wagner’s] presence in Mali is sponsored by the Kremlin and if Wagner is at odds with the Kremlin … naturally Mali will suffer the consequences on the security front,” said Malian political analyst Bassirou Doumbia.

    Mali, where military authorities seized power in coups in 2020 and 2021, is battling a years-long operation against armed groups affiliated with ISIL (ISIS) and al-Qaeda. It has said Russian forces there are not Wagner mercenaries but trainers helping local troops with equipment bought from Russia.

    But the alliance has soured relations with the United Nations and alienated Western powers, who have said the fighters are Wagner forces and have alleged that they have committed possible war crimes alongside Malian soldiers.

    The governments in Mali and Russia have denied the allegations.

    Wagner’s continued presence in Mali amid the continuing insurrection in Russia could prove problematic for Bamako’s relations with Moscow, which last year committed to send Mali shipments of fuel, fertiliser and food worth about $100m.

    “[The] exact consequences for Mali really depend on factors largely unknown such as the organisational autonomy of Wagner and their chain of command, and, of course, whether things escalate or not between [Russian President Vladimir] Putin and Wagner,” said Yvan Guichaoua, senior lecturer at the Brussels School of International Studies.

    He said there were no reports of unexpected troop movements in Mali as of Saturday morning.

    Rebel insurgencies

    The power struggle in Russia could also have significant ramifications for CAR, where hundreds of Russian operatives, including many from Wagner, have been helping the government fight several rebel insurgencies since 2018.

    Both CAR and Mali have been drawn increasingly into Russia’s orbit in recent years as the Kremlin sought greater influence in Francophone Africa to the dismay of former colonial power France, which has faced anti-French protests in the region and worsening relations with several West African governments.

    In February, French President Emmanuel Macron described the deployment of Wagner troops in Africa as the “life insurance of failing regimes in Africa” that will only sow misery.

    A suspension of Wagner operations in Africa could impact the group’s finances. The United States last October accused the mercenaries of exploiting natural resources in CAR, Mali and elsewhere to fund fighting in Ukraine – a charge Russia rejected at the time.

    Wagner began operating in Africa and the Middle East when it was founded in 2014 and was thought to have about 5,000 fighters, but has grown significantly since then.

    The paramilitary group made a name for itself internationally through its involvement in Russia’s annexation of Ukraine’s Crimean Peninsula in 2014, a move widely viewed as illegal by the international community.

    The group has also been involved in the continuing Russia-Ukraine war that began in February 2022 after Wagner forces were deployed in Ukraine on March 28, 2022. The group has 50,000 active fighters in Ukraine, according to British intelligence.

    According to the US National Security Council, while about 80 percent of its troops in Ukraine were withdrawn from prisons, it was stated that Wagner was effective in Russia’s alleged capture of Bakhmut in eastern Ukraine’s Donetsk region.

    Wagner has also sent fighters outside Ukraine to various conflicts in the Middle East and Africa, including the war in Syria. The group has cemented strong ties with several African governments over the past decade with operations in at least eight African nations, according to leaked US documents.

  • EU sanctions Wagner subsidiary following investigations by CNN

    EU sanctions Wagner subsidiary following investigations by CNN

    Following a CNN investigation into the group’s operations in July of last year, the European Commission sanctioned a Russian individual and Meroe Gold, a subsidiary of Russia’s Wagner Group, for assisting the exploitation of Sudan’s gold resources.

    According to a statement posted on the EC’s legal platform EUR-LEX on Saturday, the EU named a Russian national named Mikhail Potepkin and Yevgeny Prigozhin’s Wagner Group subsidiary in Sudan, Meroe Gold, listing them “for serious human rights abuses, including torture and extrajudicial, summary or arbitrary executions and killings, in several countries, including Sudan.”

    “Mikhail Potepkin is the director of Meroe Gold, a front company for the Wagner Group’s operations in Sudan, and is involved in the activities of M-Invest, Meroe’s parent company. He has a leadership role in the Wagner Group in Sudan and has close ties to Yevgeny Prigozhin,” according to a statement from the European Council.

    A CNN investigation last July was the first to expose the mechanism by which Wagner and Meroe Gold were operating in Sudan, circumventing US sanctions on the group.

    Multiple interviews with high-level Sudanese and US officials and troves of documents reviewed by CNN last summer painted a picture of an elaborate Russian scheme to plunder Sudan’s riches in a bid to fortify Russia against increasingly robust Western sanctions and to buttress Moscow’s war effort in Ukraine.

    The evidence also suggested that Russia colluded with Sudan’s beleaguered military leadership, enabling billions of dollars in gold to bypass the Sudanese state and to deprive the poverty-stricken country of hundreds of millions in state revenue.

    In exchange, CNN’s investigation found, Russia lent powerful political and military backing to Sudan’s increasingly unpopular military leadership as it violently quashes the country’s pro-democracy movement

    Despite Yevgeny Prigozhin’s denials, the European Council has now confirmed CNN’s findings, stating that Meroe Gold continued to operate in Sudan as a “hedge for the Wagner Group’s operations” via a Sudanese shell company.

    “Through its affiliation with the Sudanese army, the Wagner Group has secured the right to mine Sudanese gold and export it to Russia,” the Saturday statement by the European Council said.

  • China likely to supply Russia with weapons – USA’s Blinken says

    China likely to supply Russia with weapons – USA’s Blinken says

    The US Secretary of State, Antony Blinken, has stated that China is considering providing Russia with arms and ammunition for the conflict in Ukraine.


    According to Mr. Blinken, Chinese businesses are already offering “non-lethal support” to Russia, and new data suggests Beijing may do the same.

    He cautioned China that this escalation would have “serious consequences.”

    Moscow reportedly requested military hardware, but China has denied this.

    Despite being a close ally of Russian President Vladimir Putin, Chinese President Xi Jinping has not yet denounced Russia’s invasion and has advocated for peace.

    China’s foreign ministry said it would not accept “finger pointing” and “coercion” from the US over its relations with Russia.

    Mr Blinken was speaking to CBS after he met China’s top diplomat, Wang Yi, on Saturday at the Munich Security Conference.

    He said that during the meeting he expressed “deep concerns” about the “possibility that China will provide lethal material support to Russia.”

    “To date, we have seen Chinese companies… provide non-lethal support to Russia for use in Ukraine. The concern that we have now is based on information we have that they’re considering providing lethal support,” he said.

    He did not elaborate on what information the US had received about China’s potential plans. When pressed on what the US believed China might give to Russia, he said it would be primarily weapons as well as ammunition.

    The US has sanctioned a Chinese company for allegedly providing satellite imagery of Ukraine to the mercenary Wagner Group, which supplies Russia with thousands of fighters.

    Mr Blinken told CBS that, “of course, in China, there’s really no distinction between private companies and the state.”

    If China provided Russia with weapons, that would cause a “serious problem for us and in our relationship”, he added.

    Relations between Washington and Beijing were already poor after the US shot down an alleged Chinese spy balloon in early February. Both sides exchanged angry words, but equally both sides appeared embarrassed by the incident and seemed ready to move on.

    But if China were to deliver weapons to help Russian forces in Ukraine, then US-Chinese relations would deteriorate much more severely.

    It would be the most “catastrophic” thing that could happen to the relationship between the two giants, said top Republican senator Lindsay Graham.

    “It would be like buying a ticket on the Titanic after you saw the movie,” he told ABC News. “Don’t do this.”

    Mr Blinken’s warning seems to be clearly designed to deter China from doing that.

    Mr Blinken also said the US was worried about China helping Russia evade Western sanctions designed to cripple Russia’s economy. China’s trade with Russia has been growing, and it is one of the biggest markets for Russian oil, gas, and coal.

    Nato members, including the US, are sending a variety of weapons, ammunition and equipment to Ukraine, including tanks. They have stopped short of sending fighter jets, and Mr Blinken would not be drawn on whether the US would help other countries supply jets.

    “We’ve been very clear that we shouldn’t fixate or focus on any particular weapons system,” he said.

    He did, however, say that the West must ensure Ukraine had what it needed for a potential counter offensive against Russia “in the months ahead”. Russia is currently trying to advance in eastern regions of Ukraine, where some of the fiercest fighting of the war has taken place.

    The top US diplomat’s remarks come ahead of a scheduled visit by Mr Wang to Moscow, as part of the Chinese foreign policy chief’s tour of Europe.

    Mr Wang said in Munich on Saturday that China had “neither stood by idly nor thrown fuel on the fire” for the Ukraine war, Reuters reported.

    China would publish a document that laid out its position on settling the conflict, Mr Wang said. The document would state that the territorial integrity of all countries must be respected, he said.

    “I suggest that everybody starts to think calmly, especially friends in Europe, about what kind of efforts we can make to stop this war,” Mr Wang said.

    He added that there were “some forces that seemingly don’t want negotiations to succeed, or for the war to end soon”, but did not say who he meant.

    The Chinese President, Mr Xi, is scheduled to deliver a “peace speech” on the anniversary of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine on Friday, 24 February, according to Italy’s foreign minister Antonio Tajani.

    Mr Tajani told Italian radio that Mr Xi’s speech would call for peace without condemning Russia, Reuters reported.

    During their meeting, Mr Blinken and Mr Wang also exchanged strong words on the deepening row over an alleged Chinese spy balloon that was shot down over the US.

    Mr Blinken said during the meeting that the US would not “stand for any violation of our sovereignty” and that “this irresponsible act must never again occur.”

    Mr Blinken told CBS that other nations were concerned about what he called China’s “surveillance balloon program” across five continents.

    Mr Wang, meanwhile, called the episode a “political farce manufactured by the US” and accused them of “using all means to block and suppress China”. China has denied sending a spy balloon.

    And on Sunday morning, Beijing warned that the US would “bear all the consequences” if it escalated the argument over the balloon. China would “follow through to the end” in the event “the US insists on taking advantage of the issue,” it said in a foreign ministry statement reported by Reuters.

    The full interview with CBS, the BBC’s US broadcasting partner, is due to air on Sunday.

  • Russia-Ukraine: US sanctions Chinese firm helping Russia’s Wagner Group

    Russia-Ukraine: US sanctions Chinese firm helping Russia’s Wagner Group

    The US has sanctioned a Chinese company for allegedly providing satellite imagery of Ukraine in order to support the mercenary Wagner Group’s combat operations for Russia.


    The Treasury Department has placed restrictions on 16 organizations, including the Changsha Tianyi Space Science and Technology Research Institute.

    The company has offices in Beijing and Luxembourg and is also known as Spacety China.

    Wagner provides Russia with thousands of fighters for the conflict in Ukraine.

    Spacety According to a statement released on Thursday by the US Treasury Department’s Office of Foreign Assets Control, China had given Terra Tech, a technology company with offices in Russia, synthetic aperture radar (SAR) satellite images of locations in Ukraine.

    “These images were gathered in order to enable Wagner combat operations in Ukraine,” it said. The department has also sanctioned Spacety’s Luxembourg-based subsidiary.

    Under the sanctions, there can be no transfer, payment, or export of any property or interests in the United States to the targeted entities.

    Spacety China has yet to respond to the move.

    China, a close ally of Russia, has attempted to position itself as a neutral party with regard to the Ukraine war. It has been criticised by the US and its allies for refusing to condemn Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

    On its website, Spacety China describes itself as a “pioneer” in providing commercial SAR technology and says it wants to “make SAR imagery of every point on earth accessible and affordable” to users all over the world.

    SAR is a type of radar technology that can deliver higher resolution images using shorter antennas.

    Its chief executive officer, Yang Feng, sits on China’s Ministry of Science and Technology’s panel of experts, according to the company’s website.

    The site also lists a number of working partners, including state-owned enterprises such as China Aerospace Science and Industry Corporation and China Electronics Technology Group Corporation, as well as the University of the Chinese Academy of Sciences.

    Screengrab from Spacety's website
    Image caption,On its website, Spacety China describes itself as a “pioneer” in providing satellite technology

    In addition to Spacety China, 15 other entities, eight individuals and four aircraft – many of them based in Russia – that allegedly form part of Wagner’s global support network also received US sanctions.

    These include Sewa Security Services based in central Africa and Kratol Aviation based in the United Arab Emirates, which allegedly provided aircraft to move personnel and equipment between central Africa, Libya and Mali.

    Wagner now commands some 50,000 fighters in Ukraine, according to estimates from the White House. The organization plays a key role in Russia’s war efforts, and has been heavily involved in attempts to capture Bakhmut, a city in eastern Ukraine.

    It is led by Yevgeny Prigozhin, a close ally of Russian President Vladimir Putin.

    “Today’s expanded sanctions on Wagner, as well as new sanctions on their associates and other companies enabling the Russian military complex, will further impede Putin’s ability to arm and equip his war machine,” said US Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen.

  • Burkina Faso unrest: France agrees to withdraw its troops

    Burkina Faso unrest: France agrees to withdraw its troops

    France has granted a request from the military authorities of Burkina Faso to remove all of its personnel from the nation.

    Burkina Faso claims it wants to defend itself as it fights an Islamist insurgency at the moment.

    Currently stationed in Burkina Faso are 400 French special forces, who have one month to leave.

    France announced on Thursday that it would also summon its ambassador to the nation for consultations.

    Burkina Faso’s junta had demanded the ambassador’s replacement over his comments about the country’s deteriorating security situation.

    Last year French troops also left neighbouring Mali, where they had spent eight years fighting jihadists.

    France has kept close military links with many of its former colonies in West Africa and has been helping several of them fight jihadists who are active across the region under the now terminated Operation Barkhane.

    Some 3,000 French soldiers are still deployed in West Africa, mostly in Niger and Chad.

    Its continued ties, especially economic, have led to some resentment of its influence, which Russia has tapped into.

    Both Mali and the Central African Republic are now working with the Russian mercenary group, Wagner.

    Burkina Faso has denied reports it will also engage the Wagner Group against the jihadists but a liaison team from the mercenaries has already visited, according to the AFP news agency.

    A French foreign ministry spokesperson confirmed that the Burkinabè government had sent a written request for its troops to leave.

    “We will respect the terms of the agreement by honouring this request,” the spokesperson said.

    Burkina Faso has been hit by a decade-long insurgency that has forced nearly two million people from their homes.

    Most recently, suspected jihadists kidnapped around 60 women who were foraging for food in the north of the country, and at the start of the month bodies of 28 people who had been shot dead were found in the north-western town of Nouna. The women have since been released.

    Since Capt Ibrahim Traoré seized power in Burkina Faso in September, there has been widespread speculation that he might start working with Russian mercenaries, which neighbouring Ghana described as “distressing”.

    Capt Traoré has promised to win back territory from the jihadists, and to hold democratic elections in July 2024.

  • Parliament to probe Akufo-Addo’s Wagner allegation – Minority Leader

    The remarks made by President Akufo-Addo against the Wagner group in neighboring Burkina Faso will be investigated by parliament, according to Minority Leader Haruna Iddrisu.

    “I have information that our Ranking Member of Foreign Affairs, and members on the Foreign Affairs Committee will ask for details briefly to parliament on this reckless, irresponsible, unprofessional statement by the President of our Republic. If he cannot provide us with food, he should not let them bring guns on us as a country,” the Minority Leader said in an address at the NDC’s 10th Delegates Congress ongoing at the Accra Sports Stadium.

    He further accused the President of creating foreign policy crisis for Ghana.

    “He’s simply failed momentarily to have impulse control and to ensure balance between foreign policy and the security of our state when he openly condemned Burkina Faso and mentioned the Wagner group of Russia.

    Burkina Faso summoned the Ghanaian ambassador on Friday morning for “explanations” after Ghana’s president alleged that Burkina Faso had hired the Russian mercenary group Wagner, Burkina Faso’s foreign ministry said.

    Speaking to reporters alongside U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken on Wednesday, Akufo-Addo also alleged that Burkina Faso had offered Wagner a mine as payment.

    In a statement issued after the meeting with the ambassador, Burkina Faso’s foreign ministry said it had “expressed disapproval” about the statements made by the Ghanaian president.

    “Ghana could have undertaken exchanges with the Burkinabe authorities on the security issue in order to have the right information,” it said.

    However, it did not confirm or deny the allegations. In a separate message to Reuters, the foreign ministry spokesperson said, without elaborating: “In any case, Burkina has not called on Wagner”.

    Burkina Faso also recalled its ambassador from Ghana for a meeting, the spokesperson said.

    Burkinabe authorities have not commented publicly on whether or not they are working with Wagner, a mercenary group that was hired in neighbouring Mali to help fight Islamist militants.

    Meanwhile, Security Analyst, Adib Saani has questioned the propriety of the comments made by Ghana’s Leader, Akufo-Addo on the Wagner Group.

    Commenting on the fallout from the development, Adib Saani said since independence, Ghana has maintained a non-aligned posture in the global political chess games between the East and the West thus “Our decision not to take sides has helped us gain respect and favor from both sides of the divide.”

    He opined “But it’s absolutely demeaning for the President, flanked by his ministers, to sit infront of a Secretary of State to report on Wagner, a group that has not in any way neither threatened to invade Ghana, nor has it done anything that poses any threat to the security of Ghana.”

    Saani who is also Head of the Jatikay Centre for Human Security and Peace Building maintained that Burkina Faso is a sovereign country and can decide to call on whoever to help it fight any threat to their nation.

    “When Ghana hosted the Americans through the defence cooperation agreement, no country in the sub-region complained. So why does our President make such a mockery of us by going to report on an issue that has nothing to do with us hence, bring us international disrepute,” he questioned.

  • Russia is “not making significant progress” on the front lines

    In recent days, war analysts have painted a picture of Russian forces struggling to make significant gains across Ukraine.

    According to the Institute for the Study of War in the United States, they are “not making significant progress around Bakhmut, Donetsk Oblast, or anywhere else along the front lines in Ukraine.”

    However, it said Russia is still trying to push a narrative that it is making major progress in Bakhmut, a city in Ukraine’s eastern Donetsk region.

    Analysts said the information operation is likely an attempt to “improve morale” and “possibly the personal standing” of Russian oligarch Yevgeny Prigozhin, who is behind the Wagner mercenary group.

    The notorious Wagner group is “largely responsible” for the minimal gains around Bakhmut, but the ISW said the advances have been “at a languid speed and a significant cost”.

    Mr Prigozhin, who reportedly confronted Vladimir Putin over Russia’s stalling war effort, acknowledged the slow pace of the ground operations near Bakhmut last week.

    He said his Wagner forces were advancing just 100 to 200m per day, which he absurdly claimed was a normal rate for modern advances.

     

     

     

  • Wagner group ‘using Africa wealth’ to fund Ukraine war

    The US says Russian mercenaries are exploiting natural resources in the Central African Republic, Mali, Sudan to fund Moscow’s war in Ukraine.

    Russia has rejected the charge as “anti-Russian rage”, Reuters news agency reports.

    US Ambassador to the United Nations, Linda Thomas-Greenfield, said Russia’s shadowy Wagner mercenary group was using the “ill-gotten gains” to “fund Moscow’s war machine in Africa, the Middle East, and Ukraine”.

    “Make no mistake: people across Africa are paying a heavy price for the Wagner Group’s exploitative practices and human rights violations,” she told a UN Security Council meeting on the financing of armed groups through illicit trafficking of natural resources.

    Russia denies any links to Wagner.

    The group has been active in Libya since 2016, where it supported General Khalifa Haftar’s advance on the official government in Tripoli in 2019.

    In 2017, the Wagner Group was invited into the Central African Republic (CAR) to guard diamond mines. It is also reported to be working in Sudan, protecting gold mines.

    Source: BBC