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Young Bangladeshi men desperate for work allege they have been tricked into fighting for Russia against Ukraine, with the reported death of a 22-year-old sparking a surge of worried calls.

Bangladesh’s embassy in Moscow has said around a dozen families have contacted them seeking to bring back their sons they allege were duped into joining the Russian army.


Ukraine president Volodymyr Zelensky said more than 150 Chinese nationals were fighting for Russia’s army in its war against his country and accused Moscow of ‘dragging’ other countries into its invasion. The most significant presence of foreign fighters in the war is Russia’s use of North Korean troops in its Western Kursk region.

Alongside the use of Chinese and North Korean troops, Russia has largely recruited soldiers from poor countries, offering huge salaries to fighters from Cuba, Nepal, India, Bangladesh, Sierra Leone and Somalia, among others—according to accounts from prisoners of war and media reports in Ukraine, Russia and those countries.

‘We had no idea we’d end up on the battlefield,’ said Mohammad Akram Hossain, who claimed he and his brother-in-law had registered with a recruiting agency and were originally promised jobs in Cyprus, before being offered work in Russia.

‘The recruiting agency said that only work visas for Russia were available, and we agreed to go,’ the 26-year-old told AFP, now back home in the South Asian nation. ‘But we never imagined we would be abandoned like that.’

Unemployment is high in Bangladesh and the economy was hit hard by protests last year that toppled the government.

Worried relatives have been messaging Bangladeshi diplomats in Moscow after one family said their son Mohammed Yasin Sheikh, 22, was killed on March 27 while serving in the Russian army.

Abul Hashem, Sheikh’s uncle, said the family was called by his friend during the Muslim holiday of Eid at the end of March.

‘Yasin’s friend, who is also fighting for the Russian side and a Bangladeshi, called us on Eid and informed us that Yasin had been killed,’ Hashem told AFP. ‘Later, we received a call from a Russian commander.’

Sheikh’s family say they gave him money to travel when he left Bangladesh in September 2024, after a broker promised him work with a Chinese company in Russia as an electrician. But, they said, he ended up joining the Russian army in December.

‘We spent a lot to send him, and now we are waiting for his dead body,’ Hashem said. ‘We’ve requested the Bangladesh government to take steps so that his mother can bid him farewell.’

AFP could not independently verify the family’s claims.

But Farhad Hossain, Bangladesh’s charge d’affaires in Moscow, said the embassy was aware of the reported casualty. He did confirm that other Bangladeshis had contacted the embassy.

The war in Ukraine has taken a heavy toll on Russian troops, and Moscow has been on a global quest for more forces to fight.

Neither Russia nor Ukraine will say how many foreigners are serving in their militaries or how many they are holding as prisoners of war.

Hossain told AFP that Russian authorities have said those fighting on the side of Moscow had signed contracts, were on the payroll and were governed by the rules of war.

He could not confirm how many Bangladeshis were thought to have joined Russia’s army, although one Bangladeshi newspaper cited security sources suggesting there were more than 100.

In Bangladesh’s capital Dhaka, Mustafizur Rahman, superintendent of police at the criminal investigation department, said one Bangladeshi woman had been arrested in connection with alleged human trafficking, and six other cases had been opened.

‘Operations are ongoing to arrest the others,’ Rahman said.

Mohammad Akram Hossain, the man who claims to have escaped Moscow’s army, was among the first to alert Bangladeshi police of the trafficking network he said brought him to Russia.