‘Get me out’: After voice mail, Indian mother waits to hear from son duped into fighting in Ukraine


When Raja Begum heard an Indian had died in Ukraine, she collapsed to the ground, convinced it was her missing son one of dozens of young men lured to Russia on the promise of jobs, then sent to fight in the Ukraine war.

“I can’t stop thinking about the last message my son sent,” said Begum, 60, who has not heard from the 31-year-old tech graduate since January just weeks after he left the family’s village in Kashmir to head to Moscow.

Investigators of the central government say a major human trafficking network duped at least 35 men, who expected to work as “helpers” in the Russian army, and the case has increased concern about online scams targeting desperate jobseekers in India.

India’s urban unemployment rate stands at 6.6% after dropping in recent years, but rural joblessness and high rates of casual labour remain a problem especially among the young driving many to seek better-paid opportunities abroad.

The country’s large population and tough job market make it fertile ground for trafficking rackets that often use social media to recruit and tap into jobseekers’ despair, cybersecurity experts say.

“[They] often create a sense of urgency or desperation in their victims, making them more likely to act quickly and without thinking critically,” said Sheikh Asif, a cybersecurity expert and founder of Manchester-based Thames Infotech.

Appeals for help

Begum’s son Azad Yousuf Kumar, previously a tube-well digger, was searching for jobs online when he stumbled upon a YouTube post promising a job and permanent residency in Russia, his elder brother, Sajad Kumar, said.

Some of the men were also offered admission to “dubious private universities” along with “free discounted visa extensions” to draw them in, according to the Central Bureau of Investigation.

Kumar paid Rs 3 lakh to arrange his job, his brother said, leaving behind his wife and baby son when he travelled to Moscow in December.

But when he reached the Russian capital, his passport and mobile phone were seized, and he was forced to sign a one-year contract to fight alongside Russian troops in Ukraine, Sajad told Context.

“During a 15-day training session, a bullet hit his leg,” he said. In Kumar’s last message, on January 11, he begged his family to “get me out of this dangerous place”.

“Protect me from death, please take me away from here,” he said in the WhatsApp voice message, which was heard by Context.

At least two of the men who went to Russia have died while fighting in Ukraine, their families have said. The Indian Embassy in Russia has confirmed one of the deaths.

In videos circulating on social media this month, seven other men have appealed to the Indian government to help them return home, saying they travelled to Russia on tourist visas but were being forced to serve in its army.

The Ministry of External Affairs has said all of the cases had been “strongly taken up” with Moscow. The Russian Embassy in New Delhi did not respond to requests for comment.

At home in Kashmir, Kumar’s mother is haunted by his last message as the family waits for news. “I haven’t slept properly after listening to his helpless cries,” she said, as tears rolled down her cheeks.

(Reporting by Irshad Hussain and Mubashir Naik; Editing by Annie Banerji and Helen Popper.)

This article first appeared on Context, powered by the Thomson Reuters Foundation.



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