Domestic and
Dmitry Utkin in Moscow On
Vremya, the flagship news program of the state-controlled
Channel One, the disaster's coverage was confined to a 30-second report on that evening's edition. Other state media reported the incident sparingly, voicing the official version of "violation of flight safety procedures". At
Wagner Center in Saint Petersburg, flowers and candles were placed at a makeshift shrine, and the building's windows were lit up in the shape of a cross. Other makeshift memorials appeared in Moscow,
Novosibirsk and
Rostov-on-Don, which was occupied by Prigozhin and his forces during the Wagner Group rebellion. There was no immediate comment regarding the crash from the
Kremlin or from Putin, who was at an event commemorating the 80th anniversary of the
Battle of Kursk when news of the incident broke out. as did surviving members of the Wagner Council of Commanders. On 25 August, Russian presidential spokesperson
Dmitry Peskov dismissed speculation over Putin's culpability in the crash as an "absolute lie". He later said that the possibility that the crash was premeditated was not being ruled out. Pro-Kremlin journalist and
RT chief editor
Margarita Simonyan said she was "leaning toward the most obvious" version, also alluding to intentional downing.
Rossiya-24 host
Vladimir Solovyov accused Ukraine and its allies of spreading false news of Prigozhin's death but later retracted his statements. Asked by a journalist for a reaction at the sidelines of the
15th BRICS summit in South Africa, Russian foreign minister
Sergei Lavrov refused to comment. A poll conducted by
Alexei Venediktov, former head of the
Echo of Moscow radio station, found that 60% of respondents believed Prigozhin's airplane was either shot down or blown up on board, and 17% believed he had staged his own death. Only 1% believed the aircraft crash was accidental.
International In response to news of Prigozhin's death, United States president
Joe Biden and
United States National Security Council spokeswoman Adrienne Watson both stated that the incident came as no surprise. When asked about the attribution of responsibility, Biden added, "There is not much that happens in Russia that Putin is not behind, but I don't know enough to know the answer."
White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre later said that the Kremlin had "a long history of killing opponents", and that it was "very clear what happened" to Prigozhin.
Estonian prime minister Kaja Kallas called the crash a reminder of Putin's ability to eliminate opponents and scare off dissent, while
Polish foreign minister Zbigniew Rau said that those who threatened Putin's power do not "die naturally" and expressed strong doubts about the crash being accidental. The
French government expressed "reasonable doubts" about the cause of the crash, and added that Prigozhin was "the man who did Putin's dirty work" and left behind "mass graves" in Africa, Ukraine, and Russia. Moldovan president
Maia Sandu also commented on Prigozhin's death, saying it only confirmed the risks coming from Russia, "a country that has no justice", which extend to its neighboring countries. Belarusian president
Alexander Lukashenko stated he could not "imagine" Putin being responsible for Prigozhin's death, calling a supposed assassination to be "too rough and unprofessional". ==Memorials==