Thursday 24 August 2023

Ten dead in Moscow jet crash with Wagner chief Yevgeny Prigozhin on passenger list, say local authorities.

 Extract from ABC News

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Plane believed to carry Wagner chief Yevgeny Prigozhin crashes in Russia's Tver region.

Russia's civil aviation authority says Wagner group boss Yevgeny Prigozhin was listed as being on board a private jet that crashed in Russia's Tver region north of Moscow, with no survivors.

Eight bodies have been found and all 10 people aboard died in the crash.

It has not yet been confirmed whether Mr Prigozhin was actually on the aircraft.

Unconfirmed Russian media reports said that Dmitry Utkin, Mr Prigozhin's right-hand man, was also on board and that Mr Prigozhin and his associates had attended a meeting with officials from the Russian Defence Ministry.

The Embraer aircraft, en route from Moscow to St Petersburg, was carrying seven passengers and three crew.

The plane had been in flight less than 30 minutes when it crashed.

Russia's Federal Agency of Air Transport announced they had launched an investigation.

"An investigation has been launched into an Embraer plane crash that occurred tonight in the Tver region," their statement read.

"According to the passenger list, the name and surname of Yevgeny Prigozhin is among them."

"There were 10 people on board, including three crew members. According to preliminary information, all on board were killed," Russia's Ministry of Emergency Situations said in a statement.

Smoke arises from the site of a jet crash near Moscow.
All 10 people onboard the jet were killed, Russian media reported.(Getty images: Wagner Telegram Account/Anadolu Agency)

The governor of the Tver region, Igor Rudenya, had assumed control of the situation with law enforcement on the scene, the agency reported. 

A separate but routine criminal investigation was also launched by the Russian Investigative Committee due to the incident involving an aircraft.

Unconfirmed media reports said the jet belonged to Mr Prigozhin.

Flight tracking data reviewed by The Associated Press showed a private jet registered to Wagner that Mr Prigozhin had used previously took off from Moscow on Wednesday evening and its transponder signal disappeared minutes later.

Soon after the jet crashed, a second private jet linked to Mr Prigozhin that also appeared to be heading to St Petersburg turned back to Moscow and later landed, flight tracking data showed.

Mutiny may have left Prigozhin vulnerable

On Tuesday, Mr Prigozhin posted his first video message on social media since the mutiny that saw Vladimir Putin label him a traitor.

In it, he spoke about the work the Wagner group was doing in Africa.

"Justice and happiness for the African people. We're making life a nightmare for ISIS and Al Qaeda and other bandits," Mr Prigozhin said.

In July, CIA director William Burns told a security forum he thought Mr Prigozhin could be killed as retribution for the uprising.

"If I were Prigozhin, I wouldn't fire my food taster," he said.

Yevgeny Prigozhin releases first video since Russian mutiny in June.

Mr Prigozhin was the man behind June's mutiny in Russia, when his private army briefly took control of the regional centre Rostov-on-Don and began marching towards Moscow.

Some onlookers assessed the flashpoint as making Russian President Vladimir Putin look the most vulnerable he has since he came to power in Russia, a nation he has led for more than two decades.

Mr Putin would later accuse the "organisers of the rebellion" of "betraying their country".

While even peaceful protests in Russia can draw severe punishments from authorities, Mr Prigozhin and his Wagner mercenaries were, largely, left alone in the incident's aftermath.

Despite living in exile in Belarus post-uprising, Mr Prigozhin was seemingly able to travel to Russia and appeared at a meeting of African leaders in St Petersburg.

Earlier this month, Jenny Mathers, a senior lecturer in international politics at Aberystwyth University, said the light touch Mr Putin had used so far on Mr Prigozhin and his Wagner mercenaries was "extraordinary".

"Russians protesting the war have been arrested for even holding blank pieces of paper, so the Wagner group has been treated remarkably gently," she said.

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