breakfast. our top stories russian mercenary leader yevgeny prigozhin called off his rebellion after 24 hours of mayhem. prigozhin agreed to leave russia after talks with the leader of belarus. the kremlin says he won t be prosecuted. faulkner troops have also begun to leave the southern city of rostov where the began. just hours earlier, vladimir putin had called the rebellion treason. in moscow, residents have been told to avoid traveling and all mass outdoor events are canceled until next month. and, of course, with events in russia dominating the sunday papers, we will run through them with the editor peter conrad and welcome to sky news breakfast. the rebellion by russian mercenary leader to be over within 24 hours, his take in the southern city of rostov-on-don, a key communication setup for the war in ukraine and an armored of 124 miles of moscow. russian president vladimir putin called it a knife in the back of our people and said they were traitors. b
bit like a politician or a movie star, leaving that town. where is he this morning? did he go to belarus? that is still the question. that remains to be seen. so, a deal took place. that deal took place. putin and prigozhin found it acceptable. who holds one over him? you can think of this in terms of a government uprising, or a coup. this is a fight between two mafia bosses. you have to think of this in terms of the godfather. okay. not a government. peter, of course, crucially, what does this mean for the war? what does this mean for the wagner group that played a really important role for the russian side so far, drafted and when the russian side is doing up what does this mean on the battlefield? yeah, looking at that, we
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with the south, but he defended the arsenal of nuclear weapons here. the erav enemies using atomic bombs to threaten us, he said, is over forever. it doesn t look like he s going to give up those nukes any time soon. gregg: reporting inside north korea, thanks very much. heather: new reports of violence in syria just days after a u.n.-backed cease-fire went into effect there. pro-government forces, shelling areas dominated by rebels with artillery shells. killing at least 3 people. the attack threatening the u.n. s truce, aimed at ending the 13-month-old government uprising. both president assad and rebels trying to topple him are blaming each other. the taliban freeing nearly 400 prisoners in pakistan. in a dramatic pre-dawn raid, more than 100 militant, firing