UK says it will declare Russia’s Wagner mercenary group a 'banned terrorist organisation'

Home Secretary Suella Braverman said Wagner "has been involved in looting, torture and barbarous murders. Its operations in Ukraine, the Middle East and Africa are a threat to global security."
2 min read
06 September, 2023
A man pays his respects at the grave of Wagner private mercenary group military commander Dmitry Utkin, killed in a private jet crash in the Tver region last week, at the Federal Military Memorial Cemetery in the Moscow region on 31 Aug. 2023. [Getty]

The UK announced Wednesday, 6 Sept., that it will declare Russia's Wagner mercenary group a banned terrorist organisation, saying it remains a threat to global security even after the death of leader Yevgeny Prigozhin.

The government said Parliament will introduce an order to proscribe the group under the Terrorism Act. Once lawmakers approve, the designation will bar membership in or support for Wagnhas, which played a significant fighting role during Russia's invasion of Ukraine. It also has operated in Syria and several African nations.

Home Secretary Suella Braverman said Wagner "has been involved in looting, torture and barbarous murders. Its operations in Ukraine, the Middle East and Africa are a threat to global security."

"They are terrorists, plain and simple - and this proscription order makes that clear in UK law," she said.

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The ban will allow UK authorities to seize the organisation's assets, though that power is largely symbolic as Wagner is not known to operate in Britain.

The move follows a recommendation by Parliament's influential Foreign Affairs Committee in July that Wagner be banned. The committee said British authorities had "underplayed and underestimated" the threat posed by the mercenary group.

The committee said Wagner's future was uncertain after Prigozhin's short-lived armed mutiny against Russia's top military leaders in June. The lawmakers said Britain should take advantage of the confused situation to "disrupt" Wagner.

Two months after the June mutiny, Prigozhin was reported killed in a 23 Aug. plane crash. A preliminary US intelligence assessment concluded an intentional explosion downed the plane. The government of Russian President Vladimir Putin has denied involvement.