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Presumed death of Wagner boss Prigozhin makes ‘little difference’: Lithuania


The presumed death of Wagner chief Yevgeny Prigozhin does not improve regional security, Lithuania’s president said Thursday, adding that fighters from the Russian mercenary group remained in Ukraine’s neighbor Belarus.

“We really shouldn’t think that Prigozhin’s death makes us feel calmer or that it somehow improves the security situation,” Gitanas Nauseda said.

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Lithuania, a Baltic country on NATO’s eastern flank, has been warning of risks that the group may pose since its fighters moved to Belarus after a short-lived rebellion in Russia in June.

According to Russian officials, the head of the group was on board a plane that crashed on Wednesday, with all passengers killed.

But according to Nauseda, Prigozhin’s death, even if confirmed, “makes little difference” to regional security.

In similar remarks Thursday, Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki said the Wagner group was now “under direct supervision of (Russian President Vladimir) Putin and his people.”

“Even more than before, or at least to the same extent as today, it will be used as a tool of provocation, blackmail … to destabilize countries bordering Russia and Belarus,” Morawiecki told reporters.

Both Vilnius and Warsaw had previously suggested that Wagner mercenaries could help facilitate illegal migration from Belarus or even enter the countries disguised as irregular migrants.

Last week, Lithuania closed two out of six its border checkpoints with Belarus.

Read more:

France has ‘reasonable doubts’ over Wagner’s Prigozhin plane crash: Spokesman

Russian mercenary Prigozhin’s plane appeared fine on radar 30 seconds before crash

Putin may have been behind Wagner chief Prigozhin’s plane crash, Biden says

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