Wagner Prison Recruits Pardoned After 6-Month Ukraine Service The first inmates recruited from Russian prisons by the Wagner mercenary group have completed their six-month service in Ukraine and received their assured pardons from the Russian state, Wagne

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
The first inmates recruited from Russian jails by the Wagner mercenary group have completed their six-month service in Ukraine and received
their promised pardons from the Russian state, Wagner founder Yevgeny Prigozhin told journalists on Thursday."They worked off their contract
They worked with honor, with dignity
They were the first ones
Nobody else in this world works as hard as they did," Prigozhin told Russian news agency RIA-Novosti.Prigozhin said that the two dozen
inmates-turned-combatants were simply people who had been unable to find their place in society "by accident or by force of character" and
who ended up getting into trouble
Society "gave these people a chance and should be grateful" to them for fighting for Russia's "national interests," he added.One of the
returning Wagner recruits told RIA Novosti that many of the now-pardoned fighters plan to return to Wagner as paid contractors.The Wagner
Group, a shadowy organization that until 2022 was largely focused on supplying mercenaries to conflict zones in Africa and the Middle East,
has seen its public profile grow enormously in the past year, largely due to its role supplementing the undersupplied and ill-equipped
Russian army in Ukraine
Petersburg business magnate often referred to as "Putin's chef" for his longtime role supplying catering to the Kremlin, only publicly
confirmed that he founded Wagner in September.Shortly afterward, video footage of Prigozhin making a recruitment pitch to a group of inmates
in what appeared to be a Russian prison yard emerged
In exchange for six months of military service with Wagner in Ukraine, the inmates were offered early release from prison.Since then, Wagner
has opened offices in St
Petersburg and has been openly recruiting fighters from Russian prisons.Despite Thursday's pardons, the Wagner early release scheme has
Wagner who surrendered to Ukrainian forces.Nuzhin's killing by his former comrades with a sledgehammer was, Prigozhin said afterward, "a