Putin’s Chef Yevgeny Prigozhin’s Death Reports SHOCK Russia! A Look At His Journey, Private Army and Rebel Against Kremlin

Putin's Chef Yevgeny Prigozhin's Death Reports SHOCK Russia! A Look At His Journey, Private Army and Rebel Against Kremlin

New Delhi: For decades, Yevgeny Prigozhin’s fate has been linked to the Kremlin – as a loyal government contractor, and the leader of the Wagner mercenary army that fought in Ukraine and was accused of doing Russia’s dirty work in Syria and Africa. But when he directed his men against Moscow two months ago, many in Russia and abroad started wondering how long he could survive after angering Russian President Vladimir Putin. Prigozhin made a deal with Putin and the Belarusian leader for a safe haven for himself and the rebels. He was reported to appear occasionally in Russia, and showed up in a recruitment video earlier this week. But then on Wednesday Russia’s civil aviation agency said he was on a plane that crashed north of Moscow, killing all 10 people on board.

Convicted Of Robbery In 1981

Prigozhin was convicted of robbery and assault in 1981, and sentenced to 12 years in prison. When he got out, he started a restaurant business in St. Petersburg in the 1990s. Putin was the city’s deputy mayor at the time. Prigozhin used that connection to develop a catering business and won lucrative Russian government contracts that earned him the nickname ‘Putin’s chef.’ He later diversified into other areas, including media and an infamous internet ‘troll factory’ that led to his indictment in the U.S. For interfering in the 2016 presidential election.

Wagner was first spotted in action in eastern Ukraine soon after a separatist conflict erupted there in April 2014, in the weeks following Russia’s annexation of Ukraine’s Crimean Peninsula. At the time, Russia denied sending its own weapons and troops despite ample evidence to the contrary. The private Wagner army gave Moscow a degree of deniability. Wagner personnel also deployed to Syria, where Russia supported President Bashar Assad’s government in a civil war. In Libya, they fought alongside forces of commander Khalifa Hifter. The group has also operated in the Central African Republic and Mali.

But it wasn’t until September 2022 that Prigozhin admitted founding, leading and financing Wagner. By then, his mercenaries including men he’d recruited in Russian prisons ? were fighting and dying by scores in Ukraine, especially in the devastated town of Bakhmut.

Prigozhin cultivated Wagner’s reputation for ruthlessness, and the mercenaries have been accused by Western countries and U.N. Experts of human rights abuses throughout Africa, including in Central African Republic, Libya and Mali.

A 2017 online video showed a group of armed people, reportedly Wagner contractors, torturing a Syrian and beating him to death with a sledgehammer before mutilating and burning his body. In 2022, another video showed a former Wagner contractor beaten to death with a sledgehammer after he allegedly fled to the Ukrainian side and was repatriated.
Despite public outrage and demands for investigations, the Kremlin repeatedly ignored them.

Wagner’s Role in Ukraine

Wagner took a more prominent role in the Ukraine war as regular Russian troops suffered heavy losses and lost territory in humiliating defeats. Prigozhin toured Russian prisons to recruit fighters, promising pardons if they survived a half-year tour of front line duty with Wagner.

In the interview in May, he claimed to have recruited 50,000 convicts, with about 35,000 men on the front lines at all times. He has also said he had lost more than 20,000 men — half of them convicts — in the battle for Bakhmut. The U.S. Has estimated Wagner had about 50,000 personnel fighting in Ukraine, including 10,000 contractors and 40,000 convicts.

Poking the BearPrigozhin claimed full credit in January for capturing the Donetsk region salt mining town of Soledar in Ukraine, and he accused the Russian Defense Ministry of trying to steal Wagner’s glory. He repeatedly complained the Russian military failed to supply Wagner with sufficient ammunition to capture Bakhmut and threatened to pull out his men.

After the capture of Soldear, Prigozhin increasingly raised his public profile, for months boasting almost daily about Wagner’s purported victories, sardonically mocking his enemies and complaining in profanity-laced diatribes about the military brass.

On June 23, he called for an armed uprising against the defense minister and headed from Ukraine toward Moscow with his mercenaries. His forces took control of the military headquarters in Rostov-on-Don, the city in southern Russia near the border with Ukraine, and continued their ?march of justice,” until stopping a mere 200 kilometers (120 miles) from the Russian capital.

Putin branded Prigozhin a traitor as the revolt unfolded. But the criminal case against the mercenary chief on rebellion charges was later dropped. Unusually, the Kremlin said Putin had a three-hour meeting with Prigozhin and Wagner Group commanders days after the rebellion. Some number of Wagner mercenaries headed to Belarus, but the fate of both Prigozhin and his force remained unclear. U.S. President Joe Biden recently suggested Prigozhin was a marked man.

“If I were he, I’d be careful what I ate. I’d keep my eye on my menu,” Biden said last month. But the man who made his first fortune as a caterer was undaunted in his latest appearance on Monday, telling would-be Wagner recruits his organization was making Russia even greater on all continents.

Bureau Report

Be the first to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.


*