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Moscow has increasingly turned to foreign nationals to fill its ranks as it struggles with heavy battlefield losses that Ukraine says have exceeded one million since the start of the full-scale invasion in 2022.
Ukraine’s Center for Countering Disinformation, a government agency that monitors and counters foreign propaganda, said ... that since the invasion began “Moscow has built a transnational system for recruiting foreigners using deceit and criminal schemes.”
“Russia has recruited foreigners from 128 countries of the world using fraudulent recruitment centers, private companies and state channels through its diplomatic and cultural institutions,” the center wrote on its Telegram channel.
“Hundreds and thousands of citizens of various countries were drawn into the aggression through deception, coercion or for money,” it added.
The center estimates that more than 18,000 individuals from 128 countries have joined Russian forces since 2022.
Dmitry Usov, who heads Ukraine’s Coordination Headquarters for the Treatment of Prisoners of War, told CNN that this figure does not include the separate contingent of around 12,000 North Korean troops deployed under a military cooperation agreement between Moscow and Pyongyang.
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According to the report, Russia has brought in 2,715 Uzbek nationals, 1,599 Tajik citizens, 1,190 from Kazakhstan and 687 from Kyrgyzstan to help wage its war, now approaching its fourth winter.
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The agency also lists 1,338 Belarusian citizens fighting for Russia. It added that around 3,300 of these foreign fighters have already been killed in combat.
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Earlier, OpenMinds, a defense-tech company specializing in information warfare, said in a report that Moscow has expanded its online recruitment campaigns aimed at foreigners to shore up its manpower, with the number of contract military advertisements rising more than sevenfold since last summer.
It added that about half of the foreign-targeted posts were directed at Russian-speaking citizens of post-Soviet states. Many of these ads falsely promised financial benefits, social guarantees and assistance obtaining a Russian passport, the report said.
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Over 200 Kenyans fighting for Russia in Ukraine, as per BBC.
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Russia is turning to African women and conscripted North Koreans to tackle its defence worker shortage, experts say.
... The military industry [In Russia] is not recruiting Russia’s women to work in most roles ... the reluctance to recruit Russian women into jobs in the defence industry does not extend to women from other countries. Around 200 women, mainly from central and west Africa, have been hired to work in defence industry factories located in the Alabuga special economic zone in Tatarstan, a Russian republic located east of Moscow. Many of these factories build drones assembled from components imported from Iran – weapons that have been used extensively by Russia in its attacks on civilians in Ukraine.
The African women employed to build drones in Tatarstan were recruited through a programme called Alabuga Start, which targets young female migrant workers ...
It is advertised extensively on social media, including through paid influencers on TikTok ...
The Alabuga Start website appears to offer an attractive package of work experience, on-the-job training, accommodation ... However, once they arrive, the young women can find themselves living very different lives to those they had anticipated. There are reports of working long hours and exposure to dangerous chemicals, with passports being withheld to prevent women from leaving. For instance, Kenya has launched an investigation into Alabuga Start, which may see the programme shut down in that country ...