A monument to Yevgeny Prigozhin, the late head of Russian mercenary organisation the Wagner Group, was unveiled on Tuesday in Bangui, the capital of the Central African Republic (CAR), a Wagner-affiliated Telegram channel reported.
According to the Officers Union for International Security (OUIS), the Russian organisation contracted to train the armed forces, police and gendarmerie of the CAR, local officials and several Wagner fighters attended the unveiling ceremony, which took place outside Bangui’s Russian House, a branch of the Moscow-funded network of cultural centres aimed at promoting Russia abroad.
The five-metre tall monument, which portrays Prigozhin holding a walkie-talkie and wearing a bulletproof vest standing alongside Wagner commander Dmitry Utkin, was erected to “honour the memory of heroes”, the Wagner-affiliated channel wrote, referring to the Wagner fighters who have been in the CAR since 2018.
Current estimates made by the European Council for Foreign Relations (ECFR) put the number of Africa Corps fighters currently in the Central African Republic at around 2,000, with roughly another 1,000 in Mali, 100 in Burkina-Faso, and smaller contingents in both Niger and Sudan.
Both Prigozhin and Utkin were killed in a plane crash in August 2023, two months after the Wagner Group’s march on Moscow, which had begun with the aim of ousting Russia’s then-Defence Minister Sergey Shoigu, but ultimately ended in humiliating failure.