Why Are African Young Men Being Lured to Die in the Russia-Ukraine War?

The Ghanaian Foreign Minister visited the two prisoners of war at their “fortified camp” in Ukraine and said they are alive and healthy.

The Foreign Minister of Ghana, Samuel Ablakwa, on a recent visit to Kiev, Ukraine, asked his Ukrainian counterpart to help secure the release of two Ghanaians held as prisoners of war. According to a report by the BBC, of the 272 Ghanaians said to be fighting in the war, more than 55 young men have been killed. Another investigation by TV5 Monde in a special report titled All Eyes on Wagner, Le Business du désespoir estimated that there are currently 1,417 young Africans fighting in the war, of whom 316 have died.

From the African Sahel to South Africa, from Nigeria to Ghana, and from Kenya to Ethiopia, hundreds of African young people are being lured to fight in this war through deception, exploitation, and manipulation. The number of African young fighters is not fully known because of the dark world that surrounds the recruitment networks.

In South Africa, for instance, the daughter of former President Jacob Zuma, Duduzile Zuma-Sambudla, is standing trial for allegedly recruiting between 17 and 22 young South Africans to fight in the war with false promises, according to reporting by CNN. Seventeen of these South Africans, at the time she was charged, were trapped in the war-torn Donbas region.

In Kenya, Festus Omwamba, head of Global Faces Human Resources, is being held on charges of illegally recruiting 22 Kenyans to fight in the war under the pretext of lucrative employment contracts, according to another report by the BBC. The Kenyan National Intelligence Service estimates that as many as 1,000 Kenyans are currently fighting in the Russia-Ukraine war.

These nameless and faceless young Africans are our sons and daughters whose future has been sacrificed because they live in a continent where many prefer to expose themselves to death because they have lost hope in the African Motherland. Unlike the World Wars, where Africans were forced against their will by colonial oppressors to fight for the feuding Western powers in wars in which they and their ancestors had no hand and from which they would not benefit, these young people are being sacrificed by their own fellow citizens.

“Hundreds of African young people are being lured to fight in this war through deception, exploitation, and manipulation.”
— Stan Chu Ilo

We are selling our own people to foreigners knowing that they may meet violent death. The greed that drives many a demented soul and poisoned heart stops at nothing in the conscienceless pursuit of filthy lucre. What is happening to our young people today, exemplified in this illegal sale of our young men to die on the battlefields of Ukraine or Russia, reflects a cycle of decay in our continent: corruption that knows no limit; lawlessness and wickedness that know no bounds; and the falsity of the claim that we Africans love life, family, and community.

We must wake up to the lie that Ubuntu is alive in the continent if we are selling our own sons and daughters to foreigners to be slaughtered. Africa is now a leading continent for modern-day slavery and human trafficking, according to the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime. This reality shatters our claims to be the last sanctuary for the finest values and testimony to the primacy of life and a pro-life ethic. We know that these young men face almost certain death in Russia and Ukraine, yet our governments are only now beginning to take notice. In an interview with CNN, the Ukrainian Foreign Minister Andrii Sybiha claimed that more than 1,400 citizens from 36 African countries are fighting for Russia in Ukraine and that “most of them are immediately sent to the so-called ‘meat assaults’ where they are quickly killed.”

“We are selling our own people to foreigners knowing that they may meet violent death.”
— Stan Chu Ilo

As this unfortunate war enters its fourth year, the African Union, African governments, and the Catholic Church in Africa must make a pact to end this shameful and abominable act of selling our young men to die in this needless war.

First, with over 70 percent of Africans under 30 years of age, education and employment must become an absolute priority. The second liberation we long for in Africa must be anchored on the shoulders of young people. As the African UN Youth Delegate, Kapwani Kavenuke, said in a recent interview with Africa Renewal, the youth of Africa are “the heartbeat that will carry Africa from potential to prosperity.”

But this will not happen without transformative reforms that prioritize youth education, create opportunities for innovation and entrepreneurship, and implement sustainable forward-looking policies that build on the assets and idealism of African young people. Youth unemployment is rising across the continent. In Kenya, unemployment grew from 6.6 percent in 2006 to 15.2 percent in 2026 according to data from the World Bank. In South Africa, where the majority of the unemployed are Black, youth unemployment rose from 43.4 percent in 2002 to 59.9 percent in 2025, also according to World Bank data. Without jobs at home and without government social security to cushion the crushing poverty of joblessness, young Africans become desperate for any route of escape from the suffocating existence in which they live.

“Without jobs at home, young Africans become desperate for any route of escape from the suffocating existence in which they live.”
— Stan Chu Ilo

Finally, the words of Pope Leo XIV on the painful anniversary of four years of this aggression begun by Russia ring with moral clarity: “Every war is truly a wound inflicted upon the entire human family; it leaves in its wake death, devastation, and a trail of pain that marks generations. Peace cannot be postponed.” Africa knows war. Present generations have been marked by wars fought at home and their aftermath. It bleeds the heart that this generation will also live with the enduring pain of young men and women slaughtered in faraway Russia and Ukraine because their fellow Africans lured them into war on foreign soil while their governments failed them while mortgaging the future of the continent.

Author

  • Stan Chu Ilo is a senior research professor of world christianity, african studies, and global health at the Center for World Catholicism and Intercultural theology, DePaul University, and the coordinating servant of the Pan-African Catholic Theology and Pastoral Network.

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