
The intervention of the president of Belarus, Alexander Lukashenko, allegedly ended Wagner's rebellion in Russia.
Belarusian state news agency Belta reported that Vladimir Putin called Lukashenko on Saturday morning as the situation escalated.
A propagandist for the Belarusian government, Vadim Gigin, told the media that Putin was "skeptical about the possibility of negotiations and doubted whether Yevgeny Prigozhin would open the phone, as at that time he was not talking to anyone."
However, the Russian president accepted mediation and Lukashenko called Wagner's boss, Yevgeny Prigozhin. The conversation between the pair was "very difficult", Mr Gigin said.
"They immediately passed into such vulgar conversation and expressions as would make anyone under him feel bad if he heard them. "The conversation was difficult, and from what I was told, very 'masculine'," he said.
They immediately shamed such vulgar things that would make any mother cry. The conversation was difficult and, as I was told, masculine," he said
Of course, the Belarusian state-controlled media "highlights" Lukashenko, but Prigozhin himself said in his latest statement that Mr. Lukashenko had "reached out and offered to find solutions for Wagner's further operation in a legitimate jurisdiction." .
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