Ex-Wagner fighter Andrei Medvedev saw comrades shot for fleeing Ukraine front line, his lawyer says | South China Morning Post
Advertisement
Advertisement
Ukraine war
Get more with myNEWS
A personalised news feed of stories that matter to you
Learn more
Footage from an undisclosed location by a Russian human rights group shows Andrei Medvedev, a man who claims to have been a member of Russian mercenary group Wagner and who fled to Norway on January 13, seeking asylum in the Scandinavian country. Photo: Gulagu.net via AFP

Ex-Wagner fighter Andrei Medvedev saw comrades shot for fleeing Ukraine front line, his lawyer says

  • The former mercenary commander says he fears for his own life after watching what happened to Russian prisoners made to fight in Moscow’s invasion
  • Medvedev escaped to Norway and is living in a secret location while being questioned by police about his experiences in Ukraine
Ukraine war

A former commander of Russia’s Wagner mercenary group who fled to Norway has spoken about how he witnessed some of his comrades being shot as they were trying to flee from the front line in Ukraine, his Norwegian lawyer said.

Andrei Medvedev, who fled from Russia by crossing the Russian-Norwegian border on January 13, has said he fears for his life after witnessing what he said was the killing and mistreatment of Russian prisoners taken to Ukraine to fight for Wagner.

Medvedev is living in a secret location in the Oslo area after he was released from detention on Wednesday following a “disagreement” with the police about measures taken to ensure his safety.

His lawyer, Brynjulf Risnes, said that Medvedev had seen some “incredibly horrible” situations while he was fighting with Wagner last autumn.

Cadets at a military academy fire a salute during the funeral of Dmitry Menshikov, a mercenary for the private Russian military company Wagner group, killed during the military conflict in Ukraine, at a cemetery in St Petersburg in December. Photo: Reuters

He had witnessed “the shooting of his comrades while he was watching because they tried to flee”, Risnes said in an interview, citing Medvedev.

The Russian was “slowly coming to terms with what’s happening”, his lawyer said.

“His life has been chaotic and dangerous and very stressful for a very long time,” Risnes said, “particularly, of course, during the autumn when he was in Ukraine with the Wagner group”. “But of course, his life hasn’t been easy before that either.”

Thousands of Ukrainian civilians have been killed, millions uprooted and cities reduced to rubble since Russian forces invaded Ukraine 11 months ago.

Russian mercenary deemed a traitor executed with sledgehammer

Kripos, Norway’s national criminal police service, which has responsibility for investigating war crimes, has begun questioning Medvedev about his experiences in Ukraine and would continue to do so, Risnes said.

Kripos is part of a project to investigate war crimes in Ukraine conducted by the International Criminal Court.

Other groups like the Norwegian Helsinki Committee and the Clooney Foundation were also interested in talking to Medvedev, his lawyer said.

“One main thing will be to coordinate so we don’t have to ask all the questions five or 10 times,” Risnes said.

2