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HomeUS NewsWagner Group halts march on Moscow, its leader says : NPR

Wagner Group halts march on Moscow, its leader says : NPR


Members of Wagner Group inspect a car in a street of Rostov-on-Don, Russia, on Saturday.

Stringer/AFP via Getty Images


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Stringer/AFP via Getty Images


Members of Wagner Group inspect a car in a street of Rostov-on-Don, Russia, on Saturday.

Stringer/AFP via Getty Images

MOSCOW — The head of the Wagner mercenary group said his forces were ending a march on the Russian capital after demanding the resignation of the country’s top defense officials over alleged failures in the war in Ukraine.

In a statement to his Telegram social media account, Yevgeny Prigozhin said his fighters had led a “march for justice” over the past 24 hours that saw them travel from the southern Russian city of Rostov-on-Don to the outskirts of Moscow

“The whole time, not one drop of blood of our fighters was spilled,” Prigozhin said. “But now the moment has arrived when blood could be spilt.”

To avoid such a scenario, Prigozhin said he had ordered his forces to “turn our columns around and go in the opposite direction back to a field camp as planned.”

The sudden about-face appeared to hit pause on a political crisis that grew out of months of infighting between Russia’s top brass and Prigozhin over the state of the military campaign in Ukraine.

In defusing the crisis, the Kremlin also appeared to get an assist from its ally — Belarusian strongman Alexander Lukashenko.

Lukashenko’s press office said, with the Kremlin’s permission, that the Belarusian leader had carried out negotiations with Prigozhin “throughout the entire day” aimed at deescalating the feud between Wagner and the Russian military.

“As a result, they came to an agreement on the unacceptability of the start of bloody battles on Russian territory,” the statement said.



This story originally appeared on NPR

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