Ukraine war: Sergei Surovikin 'seen in first photo' since Wagner mutiny

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A photo purporting to be Sergei SurovikinImage source, Reuters
Image caption,

A photo purporting to show Sergei Surovikin has been published on social media

A photo posted online appears to show a Russian general who has not been seen in public since a mutiny by the Wagner mercenary group in June.

Sergei Surovikin is said to have been close to Wagner boss Yevgeny Prigozhin, who died in a plane crash last month.

There have been reports that Gen Surovikin is being investigated for possible complicity in the mutiny.

But a photo purporting to show Russia's former commander in Ukraine has now been published on social media.

"General Sergei Surovikin is out. Alive, healthy, at home, with his family, in Moscow. Photo taken today," well-known Russian media personality Ksenia Sobchak wrote in a caption on the picture on Telegram on Monday.

The photo shows a man wearing sunglasses walking arm in arm with a red-haired woman who resembles the general's wife, Anna.

BBC Verify analysis suggests there is a high probability that the man in the photo is Gen Surovikin, and the woman is almost certainly Anna. The BBC has also found no previous copies of the photo circulating online, suggesting it has emerged recently.

Russian journalist Alexei Venediktov separately wrote on Telegram: "General Surovikin is at home with his family. He is on leave and available to the defence ministry."

Wagner's mercenaries attempted a brief mutiny on 23 and 24 June, threatening to march on Moscow.

Prigozhin and nine others were killed in the crash near Moscow on 23 August, which led to frenzied speculation. The Wagner boss was described by many as a "dead man walking" after the failed mutiny.

Gen Surovikin had last been seen in public in a video during the mutiny urging the Wagner forces to call a halt to their action.

Media caption,

Watch: Obey Putin and return to base - Top Russian commander

Media reports days later said he had been arrested, but there has been no official confirmation of his whereabouts.

The general was put in charge of Russian forces in Ukraine in October but was removed three months later.

He gained a reputation for brutality during Russian operations in Syria, where he became known as "General Armageddon".

Image source, Reuters
Image caption,

The general, seen here with President Vladimir Putin, was put in charge of Russian forces in Ukraine in October but was removed three months later