“Deliberate wrongdoing” is among the possible causes of the plane crash that killed Russian mercenary leader Yevgeny Prigozhin last week, the Kremlin’s spokesperson said on Wednesday.
Speaking to reporters during his daily conference call, presidential press secretary Dmitry Peskov said “different versions” of what happened exist and “are being considered” by Russian investigators, including, “let’s put this way - deliberate wrongdoing”.
A business jet carrying Prigozhin, the founder and leader of the private military force Wagner Group, and his top lieutenants crashed halfway between Moscow and St. Petersburg a week ago, killing all seven passengers and three crew members on board.
The Interstate Aviation Committee, the Moscow-headquartered body that oversees civil aviation in most former Soviet republics, said in an online statement on Wednesday it was not currently investigating the crash, although the agency has an accident investigation division.
Peskov said there can’t be an international investigation into why the plane plummeted from the sky, and he urged reporters to wait for the Russian Investigative Committee to complete its review. The committee said last week it opened a criminal case to look into possible flight safety violations, a standard procedure in Russia when there is no immediate reason to suspect foul play.