Wagner lost veteran fighters in Mali ambush, in setback to Russia's
Africa campaign
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[September 11, 2024]
By Filipp Lebedev, Felix Light and Jessica Donati
LONDON/DAKAR (Reuters) - Among the dozens of Wagner mercenaries presumed
dead after a lethal battle with Tuareg rebels during a desert sandstorm
in Mali in July were Russian war veterans who survived tours in Ukraine,
Libya and Syria, according to interviews with relatives and a review of
social media data.
The loss of such experienced fighters exposes dangers faced by Russian
mercenary forces working for military juntas, which are struggling to
contain separatists and powerful offshoots of Islamic State and Al Qaeda
across the arid Sahel region in Mali, Burkina Faso and Niger.
The Mali defeat raises doubts over whether Moscow, which has admitted
funding Wagner and has absorbed many of its fighters into a defence
ministry force, will do better than Western and U.N. troops recently
expelled by the juntas, six officials and experts who work in the region
said.
By cross-referencing public information with online posts from relatives
and fighters, speaking to seven relatives and using facial recognition
software to analyse battlefield footage verified by Reuters, the news
agency was able to identify 23 fighters missing in action and two others
taken into Tuareg captivity after the ambush near Tinzaouaten, a town on
the Algerian border.
Several of the men had survived the siege of Bakhmut in Ukraine, which
Wagner's late founder Yevgeny Prigozhin called a "meat grinder." Others
had served in Libya, Syria and elsewhere. Some were former Russian
soldiers, at least one of whom had retired after a full-length army
career.
Grisly footage of dead fighters has now circulated online, and some of
relatives told Reuters the bodies of their husbands and sons had been
abandoned in the desert. Reuters could not confirm how many of the men
it identified were dead.
Margarita Goncharova said her son, Vadim Evsiukov, 31, was first
recruited in prison where he was serving a drug-related sentence in
2022. He rose through the ranks in Ukraine to lead a platoon of 500 men,
she said. After coming home, he worked as a tailor but struggled with
survivor's guilt and secretly travelled to Africa in April to join his
former commander, she said.
"He wanted to fly to Africa many times. I discouraged him as much as I
could," Goncharova said in an interview with Reuters. "I told him 'fate
has given you a once-in-a-million chance. You can start your life again,
you've won such a crazy lottery'."
The Russian Ministry of Defence, Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Wagner
did not respond to requests for comment for this story.
After Prigozhin died in August last year, Wagner employees were invited
to join a newly created group called the Africa Corps, under the defence
ministry, "to fight for justice and the interests of Russia," according
to the Africa Corps channel on social-media platform Telegram.
On the channel, Africa Corps says about half its personnel are former
Wagner employees who it allows to use Wagner insignia. Wagner's social
media channels remain active.
The Russian government has not publicly commented on the Tinzaouaten
battle.
Mali's armed forces-led government said the defeat had no impact on its
goals. The Malian Armed Forces "are committed to restoring the authority
of the state throughout the country," army spokesman Colonel Major
Souleymane Dembele told Reuters.
Wagner has acknowledged heavy losses in the Mali ambush but gave no
figure. The Malian army, which fought alongside the Russians, also did
not give a toll. Tuareg rebels, who are fighting for an independent
homeland, said they had killed 84 Russians and 47 Malians.
Reuters could not independently establish how many were killed in
battle. One video, out of more than 20 sent to Reuters by a Tuareg rebel
spokesman, showed at least 47 bodies, mostly white men, in
military-style uniforms lying in the desert. Reuters verified the
location and date of the video.
Mikhail Zvinchuk, a prominent blogger close to the Russian defence
ministry, said on social media platform RuTube in August that the defeat
showed Wagner fighters who arrived from Ukraine had underestimated the
rebels and the Al Qaeda fighters.
MISSING IN ACTION
Wagner-linked Telegram accounts named two of the dead as Nikita Fedyakin,
the administrator of The Grey Zone, a popular Wagner-focused Telegram
channel with over half a million subscribers, and Sergei Shevchenko, who
the accounts described as the unit commander. Reuters could not verify
the identity of Shevchenko.
Reuters separately identified 23 Wagner operators missing in Mali via
relatives who posted in an official Wagner Telegram chat group, checking
the names against social media accounts, publicly available data and
facial recognition software. All the relatives received calls from
Wagner recruiters on Aug. 6 to notify them their men were missing in
action, they said in the chat group.
Lyubov Bazhenova told Reuters she had no idea her son Vladimir Akimov,
25, who had briefly served in Russia's elite airborne forces as a
conscript, had signed up. She was angry with Wagner for sharing no
further information about his fate or the whereabouts of his body. She
said letters to the prosecutor's office, defence ministry and foreign
ministry had gone unanswered.
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CMA (Tuareg rebel alliance) fighters who clashed with Russian Wagner
mercenaries are seen in northeastern Mali, near Tinzaouaten, Mali,
July 2024, in this screen grab taken from a handout video.
Coordination of Azawad Movements/Handout via REUTERS
Facial-recognition software was used to identify another two men
captured by Tuareg fighters, based on photographs and videos of the
ambush site published by Tuareg sources. The Tuareg rebels posted
videos and photos of the two captives on social media. Mohamed
Elmaouloud Ramadane, a spokesman for the rebel alliance, confirmed
the men were in rebel captivity as of late August.
One of the missing fighters, Alexei Kuzekmaev, 47, had no military
experience, his wife Lyudmila Kuzekmaeva told Reuters.
"Neither my hysterics, nor tears, nor persuasion - nothing helped.
He just confronted me a month before he left home. He said 'I bought
a ticket and will be leaving.'"
Among the most experienced men was Alexander Lazarev, 48, a Russian
army veteran who served in wars against Chechen separatists in the
1990s and 2000s, according to his wife's posts in the Wagner
channel.
She declined to comment. Lazarev appears in many photos on the
Russian Facebook equivalent VKontakte wearing military uniform, with
symbols linked to several army subdivisions.
PARASTATAL MERCENARY FORCE
Democratic governments in Mali, Burkina Faso and Niger were
overthrown in a series of coups since 2020 driven by anger with
corrupt leaders and a near decade of failed Western efforts to fight
insurgencies that have killed thousands and displaced millions.
The military juntas have kicked out French and U.S. troops and U.N.
peacekeepers.
In Africa, Wagner emerged in Sudan in 2017 as the deniable face of
Russian operations. Its enterprises soon ranged from protecting
African coup leaders to gold mining and fighting jihadists. Wagner
is also active in Central African Republic. It first appeared in
Mali in late 2021.
Wagner's fortunes rose and fell last year. In May, the group led
Russia to its first significant Ukrainian battlefield victory in
almost a year with the capture of Bakhmut. But after his criticism
of Russian military leaders and his effort to lead a rebellion weeks
after the Bakhmut victory, Prigozhin died in a fiery plane crash in
August. The Kremlin has rejected as an "absolute lie" U.S.
officials' claim that Putin had Prigozhin killed.
Eric Whitaker, the top U.S. envoy to Burkina Faso until retiring in
June, who previously served in Niger, Mali and Chad, said the Putin
administration has achieved complete control over the Wagner brand
in the post-Prigozhin era.
"Africa Corps earns (the Russian government) hard-currency payments
from host governments for its services and also gains a significant
sources of revenue from gold derived from its activities in the
Sahel," he said.
Russian mercenary activity soared in Mali after Africa Corps was
formed, according to data from the Armed Conflict Location & Event
Data Project (ACLED), a U.S.-based crisis-monitoring group. Based on
media reports and social media documenting, the data shows violent
events linked to Russian mercenaries rose 81% and reported civilian
fatalities rose 65% over the past year, compared to the year before
Prigozhin's death.
Wagner does not publish recruitment figures. Jędrzej Czerep, an
analyst at Warsaw-based think tank Polish Institute of International
Affairs, estimated that around 6,000 Russian mercenaries serve in
Africa, while three diplomatic sources said about 1,500-2,000 were
in Mali.
"When Africa Corps started to promote and recruit, they were flooded
with applications," said Czerep.
"Being sent to one of the African missions was seen as far safer
than Ukraine," he said.
Tuareg spokesman Ramadane said the rebel alliance was preparing for
more clashes.
Further losses could eventually drive Russia out, said Tibor Nagy,
the top U.S. envoy to Africa in 2019, when Wagner withdrew from
northern Mozambique months after around a dozen of its men were
killed during a conflict with an Islamic State affiliate.
"They were out of there very quickly," said Nagy.
Wagner has not publicly commented on its plans in Mali.
(Reporting by Fillip Lebedev in London, Felix Light in Tbilisi and
Jessica Donati in Dakar; Writing by Jessica Donati; Additional
reporting by Fadimata Kontao in Bamako, Anna Magdalena Lubowicka in
Gdansk and Wang Jiawei; Editing by Estelle Shirbon and Frank Jack
Daniel)
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