The mercenaries of the Russian mercenary organization Wagner complete their withdrawal from the region Voronezhon the border with Ukraine, after ending their rebellion, local authorities said today.

“Units of the Wagner mercenary organization are completing their withdrawal from the Voronezh region,” regional governor Alexander Gusev said in a Telegram post, assuring that the withdrawal was being carried out “normally without incident.”

Wagner’s mercenaries had already pulled out of the south-western Russian city of Rostov last Saturday night – where they had earlier taken control of the army headquarters, an important hub for Russian operations in Ukraine – after the deal was reached to the termination of their insurgency following the negotiations between the head of the organization Yevgeny Prigozhin and the Belarusian president Alexander Lukashenko.

Today, all the restrictive measures that had come into effect on the highways of the Rostov region due to the Wagner mutiny, announced at the same time the Russian Ministry of Emergencies.

“Traffic has been restored,” a spokesman was quoted as saying by the state-run RIA Novosti news agency.

The operation of rail and road transport in the Rostov region has also been restored, according to local authorities.