we have an adjunct professor at georgetown and a cnn contributor and the former bureau chief in moscow. what happens now, jill, when prigozhin, knowing that the kremlin and putin are looking at this and there s in-fighting going on? will he be allowed to live in exile? i think the dilemma for the kremlin is you ve got prigozhin and then you have wagner. wagner is 25,000, maybe 50,000, perhaps, well-trained, pretty brutal fighters, who were pretty effective in ukraine, in a terrible way. they are really they are not trained military, but they are real fighters. so what do you do with them? so i think there are two different issues. so if you look at the fighters themselves, they re useful to russia, they could be useful to belarus, and that s why you have the president of belarus,
they are looking at at least two dozen cities to break records not only this weekend, but also extending into monday and tuesday of the upcoming week. they extend from florida all the way back through california and portions of oregon, where, again, we re expecting these temperatures to get pretty high. yes, it s summer, yes, this is the time of year, but even for a lot of these areas this is extreme. thank you so much, allison chinchar. coming up, where is wagner mercenary chief yevgeny prigozhin, and why hasn t he been seen in public a full week after his failed rebellion in russia? and he s not the only top commander who has not been seen. ( sfx: engine revving ) ok, dad, next take more speed. more speed. the best performance is high performance.
pretrial detention center. reporter: pretrial detention centers are well known to her, but that s not where yevgeny prigozhin ended up, heading instead to belarus, where alexander lukashenko offered him refuge. i realize there was a harsh decision taken to destroy. i suggested putin not to hurry, let s talk with prigozhin, with his commanders. reporter: no such help for alesia, as she fled russia. cnn first brought you her story earlier this year. she had just arrived in lithuania after fleeing her home in northern russia. taking very little, but a reminder of the cost of her freedom, the reason she was made an example of, she says, is there are many ordinary russians like her. translator: every day we see
mercenary group yevgeny prigozhin, and why does their treatment by the kremlin differ so drastically to those who are far less powerful in the country? here is cnn s melissa bell. reporter: two russians in exile, one a student with a rebellious ta too, the other an insurrectionist warlord. only one of them is on the run on terrorism charges. meet this 20-year-old, her alleged crime an anti-war social media post last year that led to a conviction and her escape to europe. now in norway, as she looks for work, she was glued to the images coming out of russia over the weekend. translator: i watched it nonstop. i followed the justice march all day. i wondered how it would end and i really wanted to see in person how prigozhin was taken to the
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