Ivan Burton, Ann Carter, Pamela Kinrade, John Taylor, Jennifer Quine
Unofficially, he worked in various African states to try to ensure regimes favourable to Wagner would come to, and remain in, power, as part of Russia's attempts to gain influence on the continent - especially at the expense of France., troops serving under the Wagner banner in Ukraine and Africa have been absorbed into Russia's official military structure.
Its successor on the continent is dubbed the Africa Corps, and data gathered by Acled shows thatHowever, Prigozhin's media empire, which Shugalei was a part of, has crumbled.As someone who operates in the shadows, it is hard to know exactly how much influence he wields.
Yet, according to some, Shugalei may not have lost too much influence despite the death of his mentor."He still seems to have the same level of influence, despite the fact that the Kremlin seems to have taken over the majority of Wagner group operations," says Beverly Ochieng, a senior analyst covering Francophone Africa for Control Risks.
He seemingly no longer denies his ties to Wagner and Prigozhin – his Telegram channel is full of posts commemorating the late oligarch and his mercenary group, and he even reposts Wagner’s recruitment information.
Yet, aside from his arrest in Chad and a July trip to Angola which he documented on Telegram, it is hard to tell the full scale of his current activities.under the Health and Safety at Work Act and fined £1.5m in relation to 11 deaths at the Linden Centre and other settings, then operated by the North Essex Partnership between 2004 and 2015.
The prosecution said the existence of "fixed potential ligature points" amounted to breaches of safety laws.In his sentencing remarks, Mr Justice Cavanagh wrote: "At the heart of this case are a number of interconnected failures by the trust."
Both Matthew and Ben's cases featured in the prosecution and EPUT's chief executive Paul Scott apologised, stating it was committed to learning lessons.The proceedings are getting under way after the