"No Such Outfit Legally": Russia After UK Wagner Group Ban

In June this year, the Wagner group launched a brief mutiny against the army top brass in Russia, condemned as treason by President Vladimir Putin.

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Wagner Chief Yevgeny Prigozhin was killed in a plane crash last month (File)
MOSCOW:

The Kremlin said on Wednesday that the Wagner mercenary group did not exist from a legal point of view, after being asked to comment on a British decision to designate it as a terrorist organisation.

Britain's interior minister Suella Braverman described Wagner, a private militia formerly led by the late Yevgeny Prigozhin, as "violent and destructive" and said it acted as a "military tool of Vladimir Putin's Russia overseas".

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters: "There's nothing to comment on. Perhaps one can add only that, legally-speaking, there is no such group."

Wagner has operated in Syria, Libya and a number of countries across Africa. It recruited thousands of convicts from Russian prisons to fight in Ukraine, providing the main assault force for Russia's assault on the city of Bakhmut.

In June this year, it launched a brief mutiny against the army top brass in Russia, condemned as treason by President Vladimir Putin. On August 23, Yevgeny Prigozhin and his top lieutenants were killed when a private jet he used crashed in so-far unexplained circumstances.

Remnants of Wagner's Russian fighting force are now based in Belarus. It is unclear what will become of the security services it provides to several African countries, including Mali and the Central African Republic.

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(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

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