MOSCOW (Reuters) – The Kremlin accused the Wall Avenue Journal of publishing “pulp fiction” on Friday after it reported that the loss of life of mercenary boss Yevgeny Prigozhin in a airplane crash had been orchestrated by Russian safety official Nikolai Patrushev.

The WSJ reported that Prigozhin’s personal jet was downed by a small bomb positioned below a wing. Its report cited unnamed Western intelligence officers and a former Russian intelligence officer.

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov stated he had seen the story however wouldn’t touch upon it, earlier than including: “These days, sadly, the Wall Avenue Journal has been very fond of manufacturing pulp fiction.”

Prigozhin, head of the Wagner mercenary group that fought for Russia in Ukraine, waged a long-running feud with the defence institution that culminated in an outright mutiny in late June. It ended shortly however was extensively seen as a critical problem to President Vladimir Putin‘s virtually quarter-century-old grip on energy.

Prigozhin died in a airplane crash precisely two months later. The Kremlin has beforehand rejected as an “absolute lie” the suggestion that he was killed on Putin’s orders. Putin recommended in October that the crash was brought on by hand grenades detonating contained in the plane.

9 different individuals had been additionally killed: two different prime Wagner figures, Prigozhin’s 4 bodyguards and a crew of three.

Patrushev, 72, is a former head of the FSB safety service who now serves as secretary of Russia’s Safety Council and is taken into account some of the influential hardliners amongst Putin’s shut advisers.

The 2 have identified one another since working collectively within the Soviet KGB in Leningrad – now St Petersburg – way back to the Nineteen Seventies.

(Reporting by Reuters; writing by Mark Trevelyan; modifying by Mark Heinrich)

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