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“You Escape or You Die”: African Men Reveal How Russia Tricked Them Into Fighting in Ukraine

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Tears stream down Anne Ndarua’s face whenever she speaks about her only son.

African men desperate for work are being deceived, coerced and pushed onto the front lines of Russia’s war in Ukraine, with many left dead, wounded or missing, according to harrowing accounts from victims and families.

Tears stream down Anne Ndarua’s face whenever she speaks about her only son.
Six months ago, Francis Ndung’u Ndarua, a 35-year-old Kenyan, left home for Russia after being promised a decent job as an electrical engineer. Today, his mother no longer knows whether he is alive.

Anne says she last heard directly from Francis in October. Since then, silence — broken only by chilling videos that have since gone viral and exposed what many African families now describe as a deadly trap set by Russian recruiters.

CNN report that in December, an unknown Kenyan number sent Anne a video of her son pleading with fellow Africans not to travel to Russia for job opportunities. In the footage, Francis warns that job seekers are being forcibly drafted into the Russian military and sent straight to the battlefield in Ukraine.

“You’ll end up being taken to the military even if you’ve never served in the military, and you’re taken to the frontline battle. And there are true killings,” he says in the video, sent from an unknown Kenyan number. “Many friends have died in the name of money.

About a week later, an even more disturbing clip surfaced online. In it, Francis appears in military uniform with what looks like a landmine strapped to his chest.

He looks terrified as a Russian-speaking man hurls racist slurs, declaring that Francis will be used as a “can-opener” to break through Ukrainian positions.

“It’s so traumatising,” Anne told CNN, explaining that she could not bring herself to watch the video after her daughter described it to her. She said agreeing to speak publicly was a desperate attempt to force action from both Nairobi and Moscow.

“I’m appealing to the Kenyan and Russian governments to work together to bring those children home,” she said. “They lied to them about real jobs and now they’re in war with their lives in danger.”

Before leaving Kenya, Francis was unemployed and living with his mother in a small community outside Nairobi. Anne said he paid about $620 to a local agent who promised to secure him legitimate employment in Russia.

She was shocked when Francis later told the family that he was being forced into military training shortly after arrival.

According to Anne, after just three weeks of basic training, her son was deployed to the front lines in Ukraine.

A CNN investigation has uncovered widespread recruitment of African men by Russian-linked agents, who lure job seekers with promises of civilian work, high pay, and citizenship — only for many to end up conscripted into one of the bloodiest conflicts of the modern era.

CNN reviewed hundreds of chat messages, military contracts, visas, flights and hotel records, and conducted interviews with African fighters and returnees.

The findings paint a grim picture: deception, coercion, unpaid wages, racism, and near-certain death.

Exact figures remain unclear, but several African governments — including Kenya, Uganda, South Africa and Botswana — have acknowledged that dozens, possibly hundreds, of their citizens have been drawn into Russia’s war effort.

Local media across the continent have reported similar stories of young men duped into becoming mercenaries. Governments have since issued warnings, urging citizens not to accept suspicious job offers tied to Russia.

Russia’s Defense and Foreign Ministries did not respond to CNN’s requests for comment. The Russian embassy in Nairobi also declined to comment.

CNN spoke with 12 African fighters still trapped in Ukraine, from Ghana, Nigeria, Kenya and Uganda. All said they were initially offered civilian roles such as drivers, factory workers, security guards or technicians.

They were promised signing bonuses of up to $13,000, monthly salaries as high as $3,500, and Russian citizenship upon completion of service.

Instead, upon arrival in Russia, they say they were forced into the military, rushed through minimal training, and sent to active combat zones.

Many were compelled to sign contracts written only in Russian, without legal counsel or translation. Several reported having their passports seized.

Despite Russian law requiring foreign recruits to understand the language, none of the Africans interviewed spoke Russian.

Salaries and bonuses often failed to materialise. Some fighters accused recruiters or Russian colleagues of stealing money directly from their bank accounts.
“One Russian soldier forced me at gunpoint to give him my bank card and PIN,” one African fighter told CNN anonymously. “Nearly $15,000 was withdrawn. I’ve been here seven months, and I haven’t been paid a single cent.”

He added that four men who arrived in Russia with him have since died.
Documents reviewed by CNN show that the Russian military contracts are far more binding than advertised.

They impose open-ended combat obligations, loyalty requirements, and even financial penalties for leaving. Clauses allow the state to restrict travel, confiscate passports, and impose lifelong secrecy obligations.
Promises of civilian retraining or job placement, often highlighted by recruiters, are only available after at least five years of service — and only under specific discharge conditions.
On social media, a very different narrative is aggressively pushed.

In one widely shared video, a Nigerian man in Russian military uniform urges Africans to join, describing the process as “very, very easy and very good, no stress.” Other videos circulate in Igbo, Swahili, Twi and Pidgin English, targeting specific communities.
Ghanaian soldier Kwabena Ballo, also in uniform, boasts on TikTok: “My salary can feed your father, mother and whole family for two or three years.”

But nearly all the African fighters interviewed by CNN say the reality is hellish.

They describe constant exposure to danger, racial abuse from commanders, unpaid wages, and bodies of fellow Africans left on the battlefield for months. Some spoke of colleagues losing limbs without compensation, while enduring relentless psychological torment.
“The war here is very hot, and many people are dying on both sides,” said the only African fighter who told CNN he planned to finish his contract. “This was not what these guys expected.”
Despite this, Russia continues to showcase African recruits on state television, framing them as honored volunteers. Lawmakers publicly congratulate them, and citizenship ceremonies are broadcast as proof of Russia’s supposed inclusiveness.
Patrick Kwoba, a 39-year-old Kenyan carpenter, believed the propaganda. After seeing an African friend in the Russian army living well on social media, he paid an agent $620 and was promised a $23,000 signing bonus.
“I thought I was going to be a security guard, not a combatant,” Kwoba said in Nairobi, after managing to escape.
He described his four months in Ukraine as “hell.” After only three weeks of training, he was sent to the front. He was later injured in a Ukrainian drone and grenade attack.
“When I asked for first aid using the code ‘3-star,’ my Russian partner chased me away and started shooting at me,” he said.

Kwoba eventually escaped during recovery leave in St. Petersburg, reaching the Kenyan embassy in Moscow. With the help of embassy staff, he boarded a flight home using temporary travel documents.
“So long as you’ve stepped in the Russian military, you escape or you die,” he said. “If you finish your contract, they still force you to stay.”

Kwoba still requires surgery to remove shrapnel from his body. He considers himself fortunate to be alive.

Another returnee, Kenyan photographer Charles Njoki, 32, applied directly through a Russian army recruitment portal, hoping to earn money to support his pregnant wife.
He sold his car to finance the trip and arrived in Russia within a week. While he was in training, his wife miscarried — news he only learned days later because recruits’ phones had been confiscated.

Njoki was injured in a drone attack and now suffers from permanent damage to his hand and spine. He claims African fighters were deliberately used as bait.
“They tell you that you’ll guard places, not fight,” he said. “But you end up on the front line.”

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Millions of Camels in Saudi Arabia to Receive Passports for Better Management

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The ministry of the environment, water and agriculture said the initiative would enhance the “productivity and efficiency in the sector and build a reliable reference database for camels”.

The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia has announced that it will issue passports to the kingdom’s millions of camels, in a move aimed at improving the management of its prized herds.

The ministry of the environment, water and agriculture said the initiative would enhance the “productivity and efficiency in the sector and build a reliable reference database for camels”.

A social media post from the ministry on Tuesday showed the document, described as a green passport bearing the country’s coat of arms and a golden image of a camel, Alarabiya reports.

State-backed broadcaster Al Ekhbariya reported that the passport will “contribute to organising sales and trading operations by regulating commerce and transport, ensuring official documentation, protecting owners’ rights, and facilitating proof of ownership”.

In 2024, the government estimated there were around 2.2 million camels in the kingdom. Camels have long played a vital role in Arabia as a means of transportation, a symbol of status and the backbone of a lucrative breeding industry.

Saudi Arabia also hosts annual camel beauty contests, where enthusiasts spend hundreds of thousands of dollars on animal contestants, sometimes leading to attempts to gain illegal advantages.

Organisers have in recent years intensified efforts to curb cosmetic enhancements, a practice that has persisted despite heavy penalties.

Authorities have particularly frowned upon techniques used to make camels’ lips droopier and their humps more shapely, as they seek to promote a natural appearance.

Camels have been essential to life on the Arabian Peninsula for millennia, with research published in 2021 suggesting life-sized carvings of camels and horses carved into rock faces in Saudi Arabia could be around 7,000 years old.

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Jewish Representative Council Slams Pep Guardiola Over Gaza Conflict Comments

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Manchester City manager Pep Guardiola has once again sparked controversy after using a pre-match press conference to speak on the humanitarian crisis in Gaza, drawing criticism from the Jewish community.

On Tuesday, ahead of the City’s English League Cup clash with Tottenham Hotspur, Guardiola addressed the suffering caused by conflicts around the world, including Israel’s military operations in Gaza, saying he feels compelled to speak out.

“Never, ever in the history of humanity have we had the information in front of our eyes watching more clearly than now,” Guardiola told reporters in Manchester.

“The genocide in Palestine, what happened in Ukraine, what happened in Russia, what happened all around the world, in Sudan, everywhere. It’s our problems as human beings. It’s our problem.”

The 55-year-old Spanish coach, visibly emotional, condemned the killing of innocent civilians. He said, “Wanting harm for another country? It hurts me. To completely kill thousands of innocent people, it hurts me. It’s no more complicated than that.”

Guardiola, who has previously condemned the global silence over the plight of Palestinian children, also highlighted broader issues of human suffering. “When you have an idea and you need to defend it, and you have to kill thousands of people? I’m sorry, I will stand up. Always, I will be there,” he said.

His remarks, however, were met with strong criticism from the Jewish Representative Council (JRC), which urged the manager to focus on football and warned that his comments could provoke further tension.

“We have repeatedly asked for prominent individuals to be mindful about the words they use given how Jewish people have had to endure attacks across the globe,” the JRC said in a statement issued earlier today, February 4.

“Pep Guardiola is a football manager. Whilst his humanitarian reflections may be well-intentioned, he should focus on football. Manchester City is being let down by him repeatedly straying into commentary on international affairs. This is the second time in a week that he has decided to offer his controversial views on the Middle East conflict.

“It’s especially galling given his total failure to use his significant platform to display any solidarity with the Jewish community subjected to a deadly terrorist attack a few miles from the Etihad Stadium, or the Barcelona community reeling from antisemitic violence close to where he once again engaged in remarks we believe to be provocative.

“We implore Mr Guardiola to be more careful with his future language given the significant risk faced by our community.”

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