In high diplomacy, it's not loud statements but quiet agreements that matter
Last week South Africa officially brought home four of its citizens who, according to the office of President Cyril Ramaphosa, were deceived into fighting against Ukraine on Russia's side. This is not only a story about individual tragedies — behind it lies an organized recruitment scheme with international consequences.
What is known
According to the president's statement, plans are currently underway to bring back a total of 17 people: the "distress signal" was reported as early as November 2025. Eleven of them are awaiting dispatch home in the near future; two remain in Russia — one is hospitalized, the other is undergoing paperwork procedures. Negotiations on the releases began in December 2025 after appeals from the families.
Relatives of the victims say the men were recruited with the help of Duduzile Zuma‑Sambudla — the daughter of former president Jacob Zuma: instead of the promised training for work as bodyguards, they were forced to sign military contracts. At the same time, South Africa reminds that participation in hostilities on the side of foreign forces has been a criminal offence since 1998, and an investigation into those suspected of recruiting is ongoing.
"We secured the return of our citizens and continue to work to ensure those harmed by this scheme are safe and receive assistance."
— Office of President Cyril Ramaphosa
How it works: the mechanics of recruitment
According to Bloomberg (January 2026), Russia uses internet platforms, including gaming communities, to find vulnerable young people. The scheme repeats: an attractive offer of work or training → travel abroad → pressure and signing a contract with a military component. In the cases reported by the media, the ultimate aim is not only to replenish personnel, but also to gain political and informational advantage.
Why this matters for Ukraine and partners
First, it is a security issue: recruiting foreigners allows the aggressor to partially solve personnel shortages and reduce the risks of political accountability. Second, it is a reputational blow and a risk for African countries — families and societies demand answers and protection for their citizens. Third, such cases strengthen Ukraine's arguments in appeals to the international community about the scale of Russian recruitment programmes.
The expert community points out that large recruitment networks (Bloomberg and other outlets have mentioned hundreds recruited in various countries — India, Kenya and South Africa) show that these are not isolated incidents but part of a systemic strategy. While African governments and international partners respond, it is important that the reaction be more than declarative: mechanisms are needed for prevention, rapid return of the affected and prosecution of the organizers.
Brief conclusion
This story is about families, but also about a geopolitical practice. Ukraine and its partners should record these cases as evidence of systemic actions and demand transparent investigations and accountability from Moscow. African states should enhance public information and intergovernmental coordination to prevent further tragedies.
Open question: will this isolated case grow into an international coalition against transnational recruitment — and will partners have enough political will to turn statements into concrete measures?