Who are the 13 Russians indicted by the US?

The 13 Russians indicted by the United States for interfering in its 2016 presidential election have been connected to a "troll factory" churning out online posts aimed at influencing public opinion.

Russian President Vladimir Putin attends a meeting with Russian gas monopoly Gazprom head, Alexei Miller at the Novo-Ogaryovo residence outside Moscow

Russian President Vladimir Putin attends a meeting with Russian gas monopoly Gazprom head, Alexei Miller at the Novo-Ogaryovo residence outside Moscow Source: AAP

The list is topped by Yevgeny Prigozhin, a businessman close to the Kremlin who has been linked to the secretive propaganda operation by Russian media, but who has denied meddling in elections.

He has brushed off the indictment, telling RIA Novosti state news agency: "I am not at all upset that I am in this list. If they want to see a devil, let them."




The unsealed US indictment said that those on the list except Prigozhin worked in various capacities for the Internet Research Agency, the name of the "troll factory" in the northwestern city of Saint Petersburg that allegedly worked to "interfere with the US political system."

The indictment said that Prigozhin and companies he controlled allegedly provided the agency with funding. 

Prigozhin has denied any connection with the Internet Research Agency, Interfax news agency reported.

Fake accounts

Russian media first reported on the "troll factory" in 2014, saying it ran thousands of fake accounts on social media. RBK media group reported it was initially used to influence domestic politics but from 2015 it was redirected to work on a US audience.

RBK reported in October that around 90 people worked in the "US department" of the troll factory.

A woman who had worked at the agency for two months told AFP in 2015 that she was paid to write messages praising Russian President Vladimir Putin on blogs under several different names, as well as writing hundreds of comments on other sites.

In this Tuesday, Aug. 9, 2016 file photo, businessman Yevgeny Prigozhin gestures at the Konstantin palace outside St. Petersburg
In this Tuesday, Aug. 9, 2016 file photo, businessman Yevgeny Prigozhin gestures at the Konstantin palace outside St. Petersburg Source: AAP


'Putin's chef'

Prigozhin has been under US sanctions since December 2016 for having "materially assisted" senior officials of the Russian Federation and for "extensive business dealings" with the defence ministry.

Nicknamed by Russian media "Putin's chef," he owns a company that has done catering for Kremlin receptions and has been photographed with the president.

His restaurant and catering group Konkord, or Concord, has been subject to US sanctions since 2017 and is also named in the indictment. It has won catering contracts with the defence ministry.

Prigozhin has also been linked by Russian media to the mercenary group Wagner, which has reportedly sent its operatives to Syria to fight alongside Russian armed forces. He has denied any connection to Wagner.

Prigozhin has also been linked by Russian media to a company called Yevro Polis, which in turn has been linked to Wagner. Yevro Polis, or Evro Polis, has been under US sanctions since January.

The US said it was blacklisting the company because it is "owned or controlled" by Prigozhin. 

It said the company contracted with the government of Syria to protect Syrian oil fields in exchange for a 25 percent share in oil and gas production from the fields. 

Fontanka.ru reported in summer 2017 that Yevro Polis was involved in a secret deal to take control of certain oil and gas deposits and refineries in Syria in return for freeing oil and gas sites from rebel control and providing security at the sites. It cited a source close to the energy ministry.





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Source: AFP, SBS


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