A dramatic police raid in Nairobi has exposed a disturbing recruitment pipeline that security officials say is luring desperate Kenyan job seekers into Russia’s brutal war with Ukraine.
Acting on an intelligence tip-off, officers stormed an apartment in the city on September 24, arresting 13 Kenyans and their foreign host—an operation that peeled back the layers of a fast-growing, highly coordinated scheme targeting unemployed youth and those yearning for better opportunities abroad.
According to investigators, the victims are promised lucrative employment in Russia, with offers of positions such as drivers, security guards and casual labourers.
The packages sound irresistible: fully paid travel, accommodation and a monthly salary reportedly reaching up to Sh300,000.

For many, the promise appears to be the lifeline they have been searching for.
But the reality, authorities warn, is far darker.
Upon arrival in Russia, recruits are allegedly stripped of their travel documents, coerced into signing unfamiliar paperwork and subsequently forcibly conscripted into the Russian military.
Kenyan officials say several who travelled earlier under similar arrangements were dispatched straight to the frontlines of the war in Ukraine some without ever understanding how they got there.
The latest arrests have shed light on the sophistication of the network.


