Russian President Vladimir Putin has made his first statement since last weekend’s coup attempt saying those who orchestrated the Wagner Group’s rebellion against the federation will face justice.
Putin spoke on Monday night, June
26 confirming reports that Yevgeny Prigozhin, leader of the mercenary group,
would face charges despite a previous “pardon” by the Russian government.
On Sunday, after leading his
troops close to Moscow, the Russian capital, Prigozhin asked them to retreat
and return to base to avoid spilling blood.
The Wagner leader said he didn’t
want to topple Putin’s government but to change the country’s military leaders
and exact revenge for their ambush which killed “scores of his men”.
Putin said Prigozhin’s actions
were a “stab in the back”, adding that Russia would take “brutal” actions to
eliminate the threat that the Wagner group had become.
Prior to his announcements,
criminal charges against the Wagner leader who was a former ally of Putin, for
organising an armed mutiny were filed by the Russian Federal Security Service
(FSB).
However, after his retreat,
Dmitry Peskov, Putin’s spokesperson, said Prigozhin’s charges would be dropped
and that he would move to Belarus as part of a deal brokered by Belarusian
President Alexander Lukashenko to end the Wagner rebellion.
In an address, Putin said the
rebellion was “criminal activity which is aimed at weakening the country”.
He said “any kind of blackmail is
doomed to fail” and that the mutiny leaders “wanted our society to be
fragmented”.
“The uprising was doomed to fail
and its organisers, even though they lost their sense of right and wrong,
couldn’t have failed to realise that,” he added.
Putin also thanked Wagner
officials who “took the right decision to stop and go back to prevent
bloodshed”.
He added that most Wagner
mercenaries are “patriots” who were “used” by organisers of the rebellion and
provided them with three options.
“Today you have the opportunity
to continue serving Russia by entering into a contract with the Ministry of
Defence or other law enforcement agencies, or to return to your family and
friends,” he said.
“The choice is yours, but I am
sure it will be the choice of Russian soldiers who have realised their tragic
mistake.
“The organisers of this rebellion
will be brought to justice.”
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