Wagner leader generated $250mn from sanctioned empire
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The sanctioned Russian mercenary leader Yevgeny Prigozhin generated revenues of more than a quarter of a billion dollars from his global natural resources empire in the four years before Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine, according to corporate records.
A Financial Times investigation has found that years of western sanctions against the
Evro Polis’s accounts show that the sanctions had limited effect on its operations, with the company going on in 2020 to generate sales of $134mn, and net profits of $90mn that year.
That represented a return on its shareholders’ equity of 180 per cent, which was repatriated to Russia. In December 2021, two months before the invasion, the company reported a contract-related collapse in revenues to just over $400,000 but still boasted $92mn of cash on its balance sheet.
Other Prigozhin mercenary operations are far smaller but have continued to trade in spite of being sanctioned. M Invest, a company operating in gold mining in Sudan, which was sanctioned by the US government in July 2020, still generated sales of $2.6mn the following year.
Two companies that export records show have shipped large quantities of industrial equipment to Wagner-backed companies in Sudan and Central African Republic generated more than $6mn in revenues up to the end of 2021.
The accounts also show how some Prigozhin-controlled companies appeared to switch their operations into other entities before western moves to shut them down. Mercury LLC, a company operating in the Syrian oil sector and sanctioned by the EU in 2021, generated sales of $67mn in the three years before the designation but declared zero revenues afterwards.
The analysis of Wagner-backed natural resources companies is based on their most recently available accounts up to December 2021. The revenues and profits declared by these companies in Russia have been converted back to dollars from the rouble at current exchange rates.
Prigozhin, in response to a recent FT article about his business activities and sanctions evasion, wrote on his Concord catering group’s Telegram channel: “I consider any sanctions against me, PMC Wagner, as well as any legal entities and individuals of the Russian Federation, to be absolutely illegal . . . I spit and I will spit on any sanctions.”
In response to another FT article about Wagner activities in Africa, including killings and propaganda, he said the article was correct but claimed he was not making large profits. “The Financial Times, if you don’t know, this is a British publication, published an article about the Wagner PMC, where much seems to be true,” he wrote. “Except for the last part, where they talk about my financial enrichment.”