Wagner chief Yevgeny Prigozhin is still in Russia and none of the mercenary group's fighters have set up in Belarus, its president said Thursday, casting doubt on a Kremlin deal to end their insurrection.
"As far as Prigozhin is concerned, he is in Saint Petersburg... He is not in Belarus," Alexander Lukashenko told reporters from foreign media outlets.
Speaking in the presidential palace in Minsk, Lukashenko said he knew "for sure" that Prigozhin was a free man, adding: "I spoke to him on the phone yesterday."
Lukashenko said that Wagner members had not set up a base in Belarus yet, despite an offer from the Kremlin for those who took part in the failed mutiny to do so.
"At the moment the question of their transfer and set-up has not been decided," Lukashenko said.
Prigozhin launched a mutiny against Russia's military leadership on June 23 and sent an armed column towards Moscow in the biggest challenge to President Vladimir Putin's leadership.
Some 24 hours later, the Kremlin said the crisis had been resolved thanks to mediation from Lukashenko, with Prigozhin due to depart for Belarus.
Since then, Russian authorities have shut down or raided Prigozhin's businesses.
Images broadcast by Russian media on Wednesday showed police entering Prigozhin's residence, a vast and luxurious mansion with a helicopter parked in the grounds, reportedly on June 25.
The images showed police discovering wads rubles and dollars, gold ingots, assault weapons, a closet full of wigs and several passports in Prigozhin's name but with photos of different people.
Lukashenko said he was "not worried or concerned" about hosting Wagner troops in his country and said they could instead be an asset.
"I do not think that Wagner will rise up and turn its guns against the Belarusian state," he said.
"If we need to activate these units, we will activate them immediately and their experience will be very much appreciated."
He also spoke about ties between Prigozhin and Putin.
"I don't know everything about the relationship between Putin and Prigozhin and I don't want to know everything," he said.
"Putin knows Prigozhin much better than me," he said, adding: "Do you think Putin is so vindictive that he'll bump him off tomorrow? No, that's not going to happen."
On the question of the Russian nuclear warheads that have been stationed in Belarus, he said they had only a "defensive purpose".
"We are not planning to attack anyone with nuclear weapons," he said, adding however that there would be an "immediate" response if Belarus was attacked.
Source: BSS/AFP