Pro-Kremlin businessman confirms he founded mercenary group
The secret is out about Russia’s overseas mercenaries
The secret is out about Russia’s overseas mercenaries

Police have launched a manhunt and formed a special task force to investigate the fatal shooting of a prominent…

The so-called “Oplan Romanov,” or the alleged covert operation purportedly aimed at eliminating Vice President Sara…

TACLOBAN CITY — Just a week after classes resumed following a fatal mass shooting on campus, officials at San Jose…

The Philippine Charity Sweepstakes Office (PCSO) has signed up another corporation to expand public access to the…

Water reserves at Pantabangan Dam are rising steadily following heavy rains brought by the southwest monsoon and…

Read next

What's your take?
Google Preferred Sources
Get more Daily Tribune stories in your search results
Add Daily Tribune as a preferred source on Google Search.
Continue reading
MOSCOW, Russia (AFP) — Russian businessman Yevgeny Prigozhin, an ally of President Vladimir Putin, said on Monday he had founded the Wagner mercenary group and confirmed its deployment to countries in Latin America and Africa.
Prigozhin said in a statement from his company that he founded the group in order to send fighters to Ukraine's Donbas region in 2014: "From that moment, on 1 May 2014, a group of patriots was born, which later acquired the name BTG Wagner."
Prigozhin, dubbed "Putin's chef" because of his Kremlin catering contracts, has previously denied links with Wagner.
"I myself cleaned the old weapons, figured out bulletproof vests and found specialists who could help me with this," Prigozhin added.
"These guys, heroes who defended the Syrian people, other people of Arab countries, destitute Africans and Latin Americans have become the pillars of our motherland," he said.
Prigozhin, 61, has been hit with European Union and United States sanctions.
For years, the Wagner group has been suspected of playing a role in realizing Moscow's overseas ambitions with the Kremlin denying any links.
Wagner's presence was forced into the spotlight in 2018 when independent newspaper Novaya Gazeta reported that several Russian-speaking men who killed and mutilated a detainee on video in Syria were Wagner fighters.