Yevgeny Prigozhin met with Vladimir Putin in the Kremlin 5 days after the mutiny. Dmitry Peskov spoke about this.
According to him, Putin "gave his assessment of what happened and offered the representatives of PMCs employment options."
Earlier, the French newspaper Libération wrote about this meeting, citing sources in Western intelligence.
On June 24, the press service of Alexander Lukashenko announced that, on behalf of Putin, he managed to agree with Prigozhin to stop the movement of the Wagnerites in Russia. Later, the press secretary of the Russian president, Dmitry Peskov, said that all charges against the head of the Wagner PMC would be dropped, and he would “go to Belarus.” A few days later (June 27) Lukashenka confirmed that Prigozhin had arrived in the country.
However, on July 6, Alexander Lukashenko said that Prigozhin was not in Belarus, since he "is in St. Petersburg, maybe he went to Moscow."
On Friday, presidential spokesman Dmitry Peskov admitted that he did not know where Prigozhin was: "No, we do not follow his movements, we have neither the ability nor the desire to do so."