Many questions still surround the death of Putin's enemy Yevgeny Prigozhin

A mysterious demise
Is Prigozhin alive?
Not just mere speculation
The reports of my death are greatly exaggerated...
Suspicious parallels
Now you see him, now you don't
Help wanted at Wagner Group
'Let's not be surprised if he pops up'
Giving the finger
No time to lose
The mysterious second plane
The best way to escape Putin?
A plot twist worthy of M. Night Shaymalan
Living in the shadows?
Occam's Razor
A natural death in Russia
A mystery for the ages
A mysterious demise

Yevgeny Prigozhin died on August 23, 2023, in a plane accident. At least that’s the official story, the truth is that there are many questions and theories surrounding his demise.

Is Prigozhin alive?

There are many who think the chief mercenary of Wagner Group and Putin’s ally-turned-opponent actually might be alive.

Not just mere speculation

Before you dismiss this as a conspiracy theory, there’s actually a precedence of Prigozhin apparently returning to the world of the living.

The reports of my death are greatly exaggerated...

Business Insider tells that, back in 2019, Prigozhin was thought to have died in a plane crash in the Democratic Republic of Congo, only to reappear a few days later.

Suspicious parallels

More than a few have pointed out parallels to the fatal plane crash that left 10 dead, including Prigozhin and his Wagner Group right-hand, Dmitry Utkin.

Now you see him, now you don't

The New York Post also highlights that more than a few assumed the leader of Wagner Group passed away after disappearing off the spotlight following his failed attempt to raise in arms against Russian President Vladimir Putin.

Help wanted at Wagner Group

Just a few days before his apparent demise, Prigozhin had appeared on a recruiting video for Wagner Group in what apparently is Africa.

'Let's not be surprised if he pops up'

Russia analyst Keir Giles, from the UK-based Chatham House, commented to The Washington Post that “until we know for certain it's the right Prigozhin, let's not be surprised if he pops up shortly in a new video from Africa”.

Giving the finger

Prigozhin, as reported by the news website The Daily Beast, was first identified by a missing finger and later by DNA tests. Could any of these be falsified?

No time to lose

Political analysis website Politico and many others have also found it suspicious how fast Russia’s civil aviation authority confirmed the crash and declared Prigozhin dead.

The mysterious second plane

Then there’s the mysterious second plane that according to Newsweek was owned by Prigozhin and that departed from Moscow to St. Petersburg around the same time as the ill-fated flight.

The best way to escape Putin?

Newsweek posits a few possible theories, including Prigozhin and Utkin faking their own death to escape the constant threat dangling over their heads from the Kremlin.

A plot twist worthy of M. Night Shaymalan

Researcher Marina Miron from the Department of War Studies at King’s College of London explains yet another hypothesis: That the late leaders of the Wagner Group faked their deaths with the help of Putin to continue to serve him and Russia with different faces and identities.

Living in the shadows?

“They will probably remain in the shadows forever, and we will only know the official story”, Marina Miron told Newsweek.

Occam's Razor

Of course, the most logical explanation is that Prigozhin died during the plane crash along nine other people. No mystery there.

A natural death in Russia

Prigozhin had become a liability to the Russian government and, like many people that opposed Putin in the past, he had the convenient misfortune of an early, accidental death.

A mystery for the ages

Accident or no accident, many circumstances around the death of Yevgeny Prigozhin will likely remain shrouded in mystery for the ages.

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