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Zimbabwe Says 15 Citizens Killed in Ukraine War, 66 Others Still Stuck

Zimbabwe Information Minister Zhemu Soda said 15 citizens were killed after being fraudulently recruited into the Russia-Ukraine war, with 66 still abroad, as African states complain of growing networks luring recruits into combat roles.

March 26, 2026Clash Report

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Zimbabwe's Information Minister Zhemu Soda

Information Minister Zhemu Soda said 15 Zimbabweans had been killed and 66 others remain in the conflict zone after being recruited through fraudulent job schemes. The victims were lured with promises of employment before being redirected into combat roles.

“They receive little to no training and are placed in life-threatening situations,” Soda said, adding that recruits were often stripped of travel documents and “coerced into active combat.”

Information Minister Zhemu Soda

Authorities described a pattern in which private agencies use social media platforms to target job seekers, offering attractive salaries and safe conditions. Upon arrival, recruits are reportedly forced into military service, with payments frequently withheld.

“When they are injured, killed or captured, the recruiters vanish,” Soda said, leaving families without information or support.

The Day Star
The Day Star

Investigations by The Associated Press in 2024 found similar methods, including work-study offers that transitioned into military contracts and confiscation of passports.

Zimbabwe is not alone. South Africa, Kenya and Nigeria have reported comparable cases. In South Africa, 11 men were questioned after returning in February, with authorities confirming 2 deaths. Kenyan intelligence estimates up to 1,000 recruits were sent under false pretenses, with dozens injured or missing.

Ukrainian officials estimate more than 1,700 Africans have been recruited to fight for Russia, while Ukraine’s foreign minister said over 1,400 individuals from 36 African countries are involved, many now prisoners of war.

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The war, now in its fourth year, has caused close to 2 million deaths according to a January estimate by the Center for Strategic and International Studies. Recruitment pipelines from Africa and Asia have become an emerging feature of the conflict’s manpower dynamics.

African states have accused Russia of facilitating such recruitment networks, though these operations often rely on intermediaries and informal channels.

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Zimbabwe is working to repatriate both survivors and the remains of those killed, reflecting growing diplomatic pressure across African capitals to address the issue.

The cases illustrate how global conflicts are increasingly intersecting with labor migration systems, exposing vulnerable populations to coercion and exploitation beyond traditional battlefronts.