Africa

They Never Signed Up for War: The Kenyans Betrayed by False Promises

A growing and deeply troubling reality has emerged: around 200 Kenyans are now fighting on behalf of Russia in the war against Ukraine, according to Kenya’s Foreign Affairs Minister Musalia Mudavadi. What makes this tragedy more alarming is that many of these individuals never intended to become participants in a foreign conflict. Instead, they are victims of deception, exploitation, and false promises.

Among those lured into the war are former members of Kenya’s security forces, people who once served their nation with dignity. Recruiters identified their skills, preyed on their economic struggles, and presented foreign military opportunities as legitimate work prospects—only for these Kenyans to find themselves trapped in a conflict thousands of kilometers from home.

Stories emerging from survivors paint a harrowing picture. Several rescued Kenyans report being forced to assemble drones and handle hazardous chemicals without training or protective gear. These were not the jobs they were promised; they were coerced into dangerous tasks that risked both their lives and their health. Their accounts reveal a system that sees African recruits not as human beings but as expendable labor in a geopolitical struggle they never chose.

President William Ruto has appealed to the Ukrainian government to help secure the release of Kenyans stranded or detained within the conflict zone. His request follows mounting evidence that Kenyans—and African nationals more broadly—are being targeted through deceptive recruitment schemes.

Ukraine’s government estimates that nearly 1,400 Africans are currently fighting alongside Russian forces, many drawn in by misleading job offers, online scams, or manipulative recruiters who promise education, security jobs, or lucrative contracts.

The human toll behind these statistics is heartbreaking. One young Kenyan athlete, captured in Ukraine in September, confessed that he had been tricked into joining the Russian army, only realizing too late that he had been trafficked into a war. Another woman recounted how she was compelled to work in drone assembly under brutal conditions, her skin peeling from chemical exposure.

These stories remind us that behind every headline is a human being—someone with dreams, families, and aspirations. As the conflict continues, the world must recognize these individuals not as fighters but as victims of exploitation who deserve protection, rescue, and justice.

Keith A. Newsome

I'm the founder and creator of The Black Hot Fire Network and my passion is to teach African people the truth about themselves and bring them together in unity and understanding that we are one people and need one another and have to act in that nature if we are going to survive on this planet

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