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I warned Wagner chief to watch out for threats to his life, says Belarus president Lukashenko

The Belarusian leader brokered the deal that ended a mutiny against Moscow led by Yevgeny Prigozhin two months before the plane crash that is said to have killed him

Chris Stevenson
Friday 25 August 2023 14:33 EDT
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Prigozhin says Wagner Group make ‘Russia greater’ in last video before plane crash

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Belarusian president Alexander Lukashenko has said that he warned the Wagner mercenary chief, Yevgeny Prigozhin, to “watch out” for threats to his life before the plane crash in which he is believed to have died.

Mr Lukashenko helped broker a deal between Prigozhin and the Kremlin that ended an attempted mutiny by Wagner forces against Moscow in June – an uprising that marked the most significant challenge to Vladimir Putin’s authority in more than two decades in power. Two months to the day after that revolt was halted, an aircraft believed to be carrying Prigozhin and a number of other members of Wagner’s senior leadership crashed on Wednesday.

Mr Putin had called the Wagner mutiny treason, and had initially vowed to crush it. A number of world leaders have suggested that he would not let the embarrassment of that incident stand.

Mr Lukashenko said on Friday that Prigozhin had twice dismissed concerns raised by the Belarusian leader about possible threats to his life. Mr Lukashenko said that during the mutiny he had warned Prigozhin that he would “die” if he continued to march on Moscow, to which he said Prigozhin had answered: “To hell with it – I will die.” Then, Mr Lukashenko said, when Prigozhin and his right-hand man, Dmitry Utkin, who was also listed as a passenger on the Embraer Legacy 600 which crashed, had come to see him, he had warned them both: “Lads – you watch out.”

Mr Lukashenko said that the Wagner leader had never asked him for security guarantees. “I don’t have to ensure Prigozhin’s safety... the conversation was never in that vein.”

It was not exactly clear from Mr Lukashenko’s words, which were reported by state news agency Belta, when that conversation took place, Reuters reports. Mr Lukashenko has previously claimed that he persuaded Mr Putin not to “wipe out” the Wagner leader.

US officials, speaking to American media, have suggested that a preliminary US intelligence assessment concluded the plane was downed by an intentional explosion. One of the US and Western officials who described the assessment to the Associated Press said it determined that Prigozhin was “very likely” targetted and that the explosion falls in line with Mr Putin’s “long history of trying to silence his critics”.

The Kremlin rejected that assessment on Friday, falling back on a regular refrain for Moscow that it is the West that are the root of the problem. “Right now, of course, there are lots of speculations around this plane crash and the tragic deaths of the passengers of the plane, including Yevgeny Prigozhin,” Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said during a conference call with journalists. “Of course, in the West those speculations are put out under a certain angle, and all of it is a complete lie,” he claimed. On Thursday, Mr Putin appeared to eulogise Prigozhin, calling him a “great businessman”. But he also said that the the Wagner leader had made “serious mistakes” in his life and had a “complicated fate”.

A close ally of Mr Putin, the Belarusian president said that he believed the plane crash was “just too rough and unprofessional a job” for the Russian leader to be involved. “I know Putin: he is calculating, very calm, even tardy,” Mr Lukashenko said. “I cannot imagine that Putin did it, that Putin is to blame.”

The jet crashed 300km (185 miles) north of Moscow after departing the capital for St Petersburg, carrying Prigozhin, six other Wagner members and a crew of three, according to Russia’s civil aviation authority. Rescuers found 10 bodies, and Russian media cited anonymous sources in Wagner who said Prigozhin was dead.

As part of the deal to end June’s mutiny, Prigozhin was due to set up in Belarus, with any Wagner fighters that wanted to join him. While the mercenary leader appeared to be able to travel freely, thousands of his fighters have travelled to Belarus, and have been training Belarusian soldiers near the border with Nato-member Poland. Warsaw has moved thousands of its own troops to its border in response.

Britain’s Ministry of Defence said on Friday that it was “highly likely” Prigozhin was dead and that his death “would almost certainly have a deeply destabilising effect” on Wagner, with the reported deaths of Utkin and logistics chief Valery Chekalov compounding a “leadership vacuum”.

Mr Lukashenko said Wagner fighters would remain in Belarus. “Wagner lived, Wagner is living and Wagner will live in Belarus,” the president said. “The core remains here.”

“As long as we need this unit, they will live and work with us,” he said.

Elsewhere, on the battlefield in Ukraine there was a significant attack on Russian-occupied Crimea involving dozens of drones. Russia’s Defence Ministry said that 42 drones had been shot down over Crimea and 73 as a whole across the last 24 hours.

The attacks were the latest in a surge of similar incidents in recent weeks. Ukraine has said that destroying Russia’s military infrastructure helps a counteroffensive that Kyiv began in June. President Volodymyr Zelensky told an international conference this week that Kyiv would “de-occupy” Crimea. Ukrainian military intelligence said it had assisted the navy this week in a “special operation” in which they landed units on the western tip of Crimea, had a firefight with Russian forces and raised a Ukrainian flag.

Associated Press and Reuters contributed to this report

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