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Monday October 21, 2024

Indians killed in Ukraine were forced to fight for Russia, say families

By Reuters
March 08, 2024
Mohammed Asfan from India’s Hyderabad. — NDTV/File
 Mohammed Asfan from India’s Hyderabad. — NDTV/File

NEW DELHI: When Mohammed Asfan from India’s Hyderabad city travelled to Russia to work as a “helper” in the army, his family never imagined he would end up fighting in the Ukraine war, much less die there.

Asfan is among several Indian men who, their relatives say, were lured to Russia with the temptation of lucrative job opportunities, only to be forced to fight at the front against their will.

India’s foreign ministry has said that every such case brought to its attention has been “strongly taken up”.

“We have an understanding that something like 20-odd people are stuck, we are trying our level best for their early discharge,” Foreign Ministry Spokesperson Randhir Jaiswal said last week.

The Russian foreign ministry did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

It was a post on YouTube promising a job and permanent residence after six months that led Asfan, previously a manager at a clothing store, to Russia, leaving behind his wife and two children, both under the age of two.

“He called us from the Ukraine border to tell us his passport had been seized and he was being made to fight...he asked for help but by then he was already stuck,” his brother, Imran, said, speaking to Reuters a day after being informed of Asfan’s death.

The Indian embassy in Russia, in a post on X, said efforts were being made to bring his body to India.

A similar YouTube recruitment video had lured Hemil Mangukiya, a 23-year old embroiderer from Gujarat, to Russia in December.

“Hemil was told he would work as a helper in the army and would be trained for three months, but after reaching (Russia) he realized he was being trained to fight,” his father Ashwin Mangukiya told Reuters on Thursday.