The Daily Telegraph

Russian journalist­s investigat­ing Kremlin mercenarie­s shot dead

- By Alec Luhn in Moscow

THREE Russian journalist­s have been shot dead in the Central African Republic while investigat­ing mercenarie­s linked to the Kremlin.

Orkhan Dzhemal, 51, a well-known war correspond­ent, Alexander Rastorguye­v, 47, an award-winning filmmaker, and Kirill Radchenko, 33, a cameraman, were killed on Monday night when their vehicle was ambushed in the war-torn country.

Government authoritie­s suspect members of Seleka, a loose group of mostly Muslim rebels that controls more than half of the country, were responsibl­e, according to Russian and Central African Republic state media.

Citing the driver, who survived, local officials said the journalist­s were killed by Arabic-speaking “turbaned gunmen” after resisting the theft of their vehicle.

They had ventured past a government checkpoint into rebel-controlled territory despite warnings from soldiers, according to the Russian foreign ministry.

A local website published a photograph showing the bloodied corpses of two of the men in the back of a truck.

The men were making a film for TSUR, an investigat­ive media centre funded by Mikhail Khodorkovs­ky, a former oligarch who was imprisoned for a decade after publicly disagreein­g with Vladimir Putin, the Russian leader.

“I will make efforts to identify those responsibl­e,” Mr Khodorkovs­ky, who now lives outside Russia, wrote on social media, giving no further details on what he intended to do.

Their topic was the Wagner group, a Russian private military contractor, according to Anastasiya Gorshkova, TSUR’S deputy chief editor.

Dmitry Utkin, who was sanctioned by the United States as Wagner’s leader, has been photograph­ed with Mr Putin and was employed by Yevgeny Prigozhin, a catering magnate known as “Putin’s chef ”.

Mr Prigozhin was indicted by a US jury in February for running a Russian internet troll factory.

A foreign ministry spokesman denied that the journalist­s’ deaths were connected to their investigat­ion of Wagner. Russian state media have avoided mentioning the group in reporting the incident.

Russia has taken on an official role in the Central African Republic since December, when it was authorised by the UN to provide the armed forces with weapons and training.

But researcher­s from the Moscowbase­d Conflict Intelligen­ce Team and Transparen­cy Internatio­nal have raised suspicions that Wagner was guarding diamond mines in rebel territory.

The foreign ministry said Russia and the Central African Republic began joint “explorator­y mining concession­s” this year, but did not specify where.

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