How The Russia-Ukraine War Has Affected Africa - Foreign Affairs - Nairaland
Nairaland Forum › Nairaland General › Politics › Foreign Affairs › How The Russia-Ukraine War Has Affected Africa (7341 Views)
| How The Russia-Ukraine War Has Affected Africa by AnonPoet(op): 12:35pm On Feb 23 |
Before 2022, they had repeatedly denied nurturing plans to attack Ukraine; however, contrary to their initial claim, in February 2022, Russia launched a multi-front invasion of Ukraine. The main attacks occurred on three fronts; a northern front from Belarus aimed at Kyiv, a southern front from occupied Crimea targeting Kherson and Mykolaiv, and an eastern front toward Donetsk and Luhansk. The initial assault consisted of heavy airstrikes and ground forces, with significant advances near Kyiv and Kharkiv, writes Seunmanuel Faleye. For Vladimir Putin, he had set wheels in motion for what his generals had speculated would be Russia’s quickest victory in seventy-two hours. However, contrary to their projections, the war has now lasted for one thousand, four hundred and sixty-one days. As of today, the Russia-Ukraine War is not over, and its wounds extend far beyond the borders of Ukraine.https://applesbite.com/explainer-russia-ukraine-war-four-years-of-a-conflict-planned-for-three-days-and-the-african-lives-it-is-quietly-consuming/
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| Re: How The Russia-Ukraine War Has Affected Africa by AnonPoet(op): 12:38pm On Feb 23 |
AFRICA'S SONS AND DAUGHTERShttps://applesbite.com/explainer-russia-ukraine-war-four-years-of-a-conflict-planned-for-three-days-and-the-african-lives-it-is-quietly-consuming/ |
| Re: How The Russia-Ukraine War Has Affected Africa by AnonPoet(op): 12:44pm On Feb 23 |
AFRICA’S SONS AND DAUGHTERS Among the most disturbing stories to emerge from four years of war is one that has received far too little attention in mainstream international coverage: the systematic exploitation of African nationals by Russia’s war machine. It comes in two forms. The first is the recruitment, often through deception and coercion, of African men to fight and die on the frontlines of Ukraine. The second is a targeted scheme to lure young African women into drone assembly factories in the Russian interior, where they manufacture the weapons used to bomb Ukrainian cities. In February 2026, the investigative research project ‘All Eyes on Wagner’ released a report based on a database it had obtained containing the records of 1,417 African recruits in Russia’s military. Of these, 316 had been killed in action. The organisation believes the actual number is significantly higher. “Africa’s men and women are not resources to be deployed in other people’s wars. African governments have a fundamental duty to protect their citizens from exploitation.” –Dr. Godspower Oshodin, International Relations Expert The recruitment pattern follows a template that investigators have come to know well. African men, many of them students on government scholarships or economic migrants in Russia, are approached with offers of lucrative security contracts, Russian passports, financial compensation, and residency rights. Some are told explicitly they are signing up for combat. Many are not. They are promised logistics work, security duties, non-combat support roles. They arrive at the front. Students at Russian universities have been particularly vulnerable. Several documented cases involve individuals pressured into military service through implicit or explicit threats to their visa or scholarship status, a grotesque subversion of the educational relationship between Russia and numerous African partner nations. The second recruitment scheme is, if anything, more calculated in its exploitation. Since 2023, the Alabuga Special Economic Zone in Tatarstan, a facility that the Wall Street Journal estimated in 2024 had recruited over one thousand African women, has been targeting young women aged 18 to 22 from across Africa through social media and local intermediaries. The pitch: high salaries and work-study opportunities in hospitality or catering. What they find upon arrival is something else entirely. They are tasked with assembling Iranian-designed Shahed suicide drones, the same drones that Russia fires into Ukrainian cities and power stations. The Associated Press has reported on the conditions: long working hours, constant surveillance, restricted communications, and exposure to damaging chemicals. Allegations of racism and harassment against African workers by Russian staff and students have also emerged from the facility. There is a further, chilling dimension. Alabuga SEZ is a key component of Russia’s military-industrial infrastructure, which makes it a target for Ukrainian strikes. Ukrainian drones and missiles have already attacked the facility. African workers have been injured. Their accommodation has been damaged. Young women from Lagos, Accra, and Nairobi, who came to Russia believing they were pursuing educational opportunities, find themselves living in an active war zone. Emeka Nwosu, a spokesperson for the ECOWAS Youth Council, is furious. ‘This is modern-day exploitation dressed up as opportunity,’ he told The Global Observer. ‘Our young women are being recruited under false pretences to manufacture weapons of war. They are living under military surveillance, in facilities that are being bombed. Our governments must act. The African Union must act. This silence is not neutrality, it is complicity.’ The ECOWAS Youth Council has called on West African governments to launch formal investigations into the Alabuga recruitment pipeline, to warn students and job-seekers about Russia’s deceptive recruitment tactics, and to demand the repatriation of any nationals currently trapped in military facilities or conscripted into combat roles. “Russia’s consistent messaging, framing itself as an anti-colonial power opposed to Western imperialism, resonates with historical grievances that remain politically potent across much of Africa. This framing is profoundly cynical.” Dr. Godspower Oshodin, International Relations Expert Dr. Oshodin places the exploitation of African labour within Russia’s broader influence campaign on the continent. Moscow has cultivated African governments through military partnerships, energy deals, and the language of anti-colonialism, presenting itself as a champion of African sovereignty against Western imperialism. It is a message that has resonated, partly because of genuine grievances about Western double standards, and partly because it has been backed by significant resources. ‘The irony is tragic,’ Oshodin noted. ‘A country that is waging an expansionist war against a smaller neighbour, seeking to erase its national identity and sovereignty, is presenting itself as the champion of anti-colonialism to African audiences. Africa’s own painful history of colonialism is being instrumentalised to justify behaviour that mirrors the colonial playbook: territorial expansion, denial of the colonised people’s identity, and the brutal suppression of resistance.’ https://applesbite.com/explainer-russia-ukraine-war-four-years-of-a-conflict-planned-for-three-days-and-the-african-lives-it-is-quietly-consuming/ |
| Re: How The Russia-Ukraine War Has Affected Africa by AnonPoet(op): 12:51pm On Feb 23 |
The diplomatic payoff has been visible at the United Nations General Assembly, where a significant bloc of African states has either voted against resolutions condemning Russia’s invasion or abstained. Analysts are divided on how much of this reflects genuine Russian influence and how much reflects Africa’s complex positioning between major powers. What is undisputed is that Russia has cultivated these relationships with deliberate intent and extracted value from them. THE PRICE AFRICA IS PAYING Beyond the recruitment of soldiers and drone workers, the Russia-Ukraine war has imposed a massive, largely invisible economic toll on the African continent. The mechanisms are varied; food prices, energy shocks, fertiliser shortages, debt spirals, and disrupted development financing, but they converge on the same painful reality: a war fought thousands of miles from Africa’s borders has pushed millions of Africans deeper into poverty. The most immediate and devastating impact has been on food security. Russia and Ukraine together account for roughly 30 percent of global wheat exports, 20 percent of corn exports, and close to 80 percent of global sunflower oil exports. When the war disrupted Black Sea shipping routes, global commodity markets lurched. Wheat prices surged. For a continent where many nations import between 30 and 90 percent of their wheat requirements, the consequences were catastrophic. Egypt, the world’s largest wheat importer, faced a crisis with political as well as humanitarian dimensions. The price of bread has carried existential significance in Egypt since the Bread Riots of 1977. Sudan is already in conflict. Nigeria is battling inflation. Kenya is already under fiscal pressure. Each faced a food price shock that landed hardest on the households that could least absorb it, families for whom food represents 60 to 70 percent of total expenditure. According to the United Nations World Food Programme, the number of acutely food-insecure people in Africa increased by tens of millions in the two years following the invasion. In the Sahel, the Horn of Africa, and parts of Southern Africa, already grinding through their own cycles of drought and conflict, the external shock tipped millions over the edge from food stress into food crisis. Then came the fertiliser emergency. Russia and Belarus together supply approximately 40 percent of global potash exports. Russia is a dominant exporter of nitrogen-based fertilisers. Western sanctions and Russian export restrictions combined to drive fertiliser prices to historic highs. For Africa’s smallholder farmers, who produce the majority of the continent’s food, the choice became stark: buy fertiliser at prices they could not afford, or plant less and harvest less. Millions chose the latter. The long-term yield consequences of reduced fertiliser application will outlast the immediate price spike by years. In the energy markets, African oil importers, Kenya, Ethiopia, Rwanda, Ghana, were punished by fuel price surges that cascaded through their economies, raising transport costs, inflating consumer prices, and eroding living standards. Several governments were forced to cut politically sensitive fuel subsidies, triggering social unrest. Nigeria’s fuel subsidy removal in 2023, while driven by multiple factors, was accelerated by a fiscal environment the war had severely worsened. The global interest rate response to war-driven inflation compounded the economic damage. As the US Federal Reserve and other major central banks raised rates aggressively, capital fled emerging markets. African governments that had borrowed heavily during the low-interest years of the 2010s suddenly faced rising debt service costs and depreciating currencies simultaneously. Ghana, Zambia, and Ethiopia descended into formal debt distress, requiring IMF interventions and painful restructuring negotiations. Public sector salaries froze. Health and education budgets were cut. Infrastructure investment stalled. ‘The war has shown that Africa’s economic vulnerability to geopolitical shocks elsewhere remains a structural problem that no amount of continental rhetoric can paper over,’ Dr. Oshodin noted. ‘Food import dependency, insufficient domestic energy production, and fragile fiscal positions leave African nations dangerously exposed to disruptions in global commodity and financial markets that originate thousands of miles from the continent.’ There are opportunities buried within the crisis. Europe’s desperate search for alternatives to Russian energy has created genuine demand for African liquefied natural gas, with new investment flowing to Mozambique, Tanzania, Senegal, and Nigeria. The reconfiguration of global food supply chains has created openings for African agricultural exporters. But these structural opportunities require investment, infrastructure, and institutional capacity at a scale and speed that current conditions make difficult to achieve. THE DIPLOMACY THAT HAS NOT WORKED Four years of international diplomatic effort have produced one prisoner swap agreement and a great deal of failed talks. Russia has consistently shifted its negotiating position, dismissed international attempts to settle the conflict, and continued to strike Ukrainian energy infrastructure even during active peace discussions. The election of Donald Trump to the US presidency in late 2024 shifted the diplomatic landscape significantly. The Trump administration declared its intention to end the war quickly, and a new diplomatic trajectory was established at the August 2025 Alaska Summit, where Trump and Putin met in the most high-profile face-to-face engagement since the invasion began. No deal emerged. The United States subsequently drafted a 28-point peace plan that proposed a permanent constitutional ban on Ukraine joining NATO, a cap on Ukrainian Armed Forces at 600,000 personnel, and sweeping territorial concessions to Russia. European allies, alarmed by the concessions on offer, issued a counter-proposal in November 2025 that rejected Russian territorial claims outright. The most recent formal talks took place on February 4-5, 2026, in Abu Dhabi, a trilateral engagement involving Ukrainian, Russian, and US representatives. Even as negotiators met, Russia launched record-scale attacks on Ukrainian energy infrastructure in sub-zero temperatures. The talks ended without a breakthrough. The war continued. ‘Russia continues to undermine peace talks with ongoing strikes on Ukrainian infrastructure,’ the briefing from conflict monitors noted flatly. ‘Russia refuses to concede illegally held Ukrainian territory and all diplomatic efforts so far have ended in failure.’ Analysts have begun describing Russia’s posture as ‘Phase Zero’, a shift from pure battlefield aggression toward escalation outside the conventional front: cyber-attacks, disinformation campaigns, political interference in European democracies. The military grind continues. The diplomatic stalemate continues. And the casualties mount. RUSSIA’S BLEEDING Perhaps the most consequential and underappreciated dimension of this war is the scale of Russia’s human losses. At 31,700 casualties in January 2026 alone – killed, wounded, and missing – Russia is losing personnel at a pace that strains credibility and defies the Kremlin’s public messaging of a controlled ‘special military operation.’ CSIS estimates that Russian casualties since February 2022 stand at approximately 1.2 million, against Ukrainian losses estimated at between 500,000 and 600,000. Combined, the conflict is projected to reach two million casualties by spring 2026, making it, by some measures, the deadliest conventional war since the Korean conflict. Russia has attempted to compensate for its staggering manpower losses through multiple mechanisms: repeated waves of mobilisation, the recruitment of convicts offered pardons in exchange for front-line service, the deployment of North Korean troops in significant numbers (confirmed by multiple intelligence agencies), and, as documented above, the deceptive recruitment of African nationals. The reliance on African fighters is not merely a footnote. It is a symptom. It tells you that Russia’s own population is being bled dry. That the Kremlin is scraping the edges of every available manpower pool, domestic, Korean, and now African, to sustain a war that was supposed to last three days. Four years later, the front has barely moved. But the graveyards keep growing. Chisom Adaeze, reporting from the Ukrainian side of the front, describes the arithmetic of attrition in stark terms. ‘You walk through some of these villages that were held by Russia for months and then recaptured,’ she says. ‘You understand what 31,000 casualties in a month actually looks like on the ground. It is not a statistic. It is a landscape.’ AFRICA CANNOT AFFORD TO BE A SPECTATOR IN THIS WAR As the fourth anniversary passes, the Russia-Ukraine war enters its fifth year with no end in sight and consequences that reach into every corner of the globe. The frontlines are relatively static. The casualties are not. The diplomacy has stalled. The hunger and debt crises across Africa have not. For Africa, the war presents a moment of moral and strategic reckoning that its leaders have, by and large, not yet risen to meet. Young African men are dying in Ukrainian trenches, recruited through lies. Young African women are assembling drones in facilities that are being bombed, having been lured with false promises. And African governments, with a handful of exceptions, have responded with silence or studied ambiguity. “The sovereignty of Ukraine is not a Western value; it is a universal value. An Africa that defends the sovereignty of its own nations but equivocates on the sovereignty of others exposes itself to profound moral inconsistency.” Dr. Godspower Oshodin, International Relations Expert Oshodin puts it with the bluntness of his generation: ‘We keep hearing that Africa must be neutral. But neutrality in the face of exploitation is not a position; it is an abdication. Our youth are being used as cannon fodder and drone workers. That is not an abstract geopolitical question. That is a crisis.’ Dr. Oshodin offers the broadest framing. ‘History does not wait,’ he submitted. ‘And Africa cannot afford to be perpetually on the receiving end of other people’s wars.’ The continent that holds 60 percent of the world’s uncultivated arable land, enormous untapped energy reserves, and the fastest-growing youth population on earth has the structural endowments to chart its own course. What it has lacked, in this war as in so many others, is the political will to translate those endowments into genuine strategic autonomy. Four years. Two million casualties projected. Millions of Africans hungry. Hundreds of African fighters have died in a foreign war they may not have chosen. Young African women manufacturing weapons of destruction in a facility that is itself a weapon target. A peace process in ruins. The question for Africa’s leaders, as this grim anniversary passes, is not whether this war matters to Africa. It clearly does, in every granary, every fertiliser depot, every scholarship programme, every household squeezed by inflation and every young person lured by a fraudulent Russian job offer. The question is whether Africa will finally decide that its people matter enough to say so, loudly and without equivocation. https://applesbite.com/explainer-russia-ukraine-war-four-years-of-a-conflict-planned-for-three-days-and-the-african-lives-it-is-quietly-consuming/ |
| Re: How The Russia-Ukraine War Has Affected Africa by HacheNoire: 12:51pm On Feb 23 |
Those at loggerheads have not lost a single member of their family. Who dies? The friends and family of the middle class and poor. War! Nothing good comes out of it at the end of the day. Coffins, graves, trauma, agony, destruction, PTSD and sought of mental diseases. |
| Re: How The Russia-Ukraine War Has Affected Africa by 1Alex: 1:29pm On Feb 23 |
The summary Russia started a big invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, expecting to win in a few days. It has now gone on for over four years with heavy fighting and no clear end. The war has caused huge death and destruction inside Ukraine. It’s one of the deadliest wars in decades. A surprising and sad part is how some African people are being pulled into the conflict: Some African men have been tricked or pressured into fighting for Russian forces on the frontlines. Some African women have been lured to Russia with promises of jobs but end up working in drone factories building weapons used in the war. This is happening because Russia is losing many of its own soldiers and is looking for more fighters from anywhere, including Africa. The conflict also hurts Africa in economic and social ways: Prices for food and energy have gone up, slowing growth and making life harder. Many African governments have stayed neutral or avoided publicly condemning Russia at international meetings, sometimes because of political links or trade relationships. The article argues Africa shouldn’t ignore this war. The losses and effects reach far beyond Europe and are quietly affecting African people too. |
| Re: How The Russia-Ukraine War Has Affected Africa by Nobody: 1:29pm On Feb 23 |
Writeerng and Kaliningrad disappeared from the chat |
| Re: How The Russia-Ukraine War Has Affected Africa by Bigsam99: 1:37pm On Feb 23 |
So many inconsistencies and wrong assertions in the article that I don't even know where to start to argue against it. All i know is that issues like this are judged through narratives. The author is already following a bias and that reflects in every paragraph on this essay. Russia did not fight Georgia in 2008 because it wanted to join NATO. That assertion is wrong and idiotic. It was all on the news at the beginning of the 2008 Olympics in Beijing and I watched CNN that day. First breaking news was that Georgian troops were bombarding South Ossetia, a separatist area that identifies with Russia. The following day, Russian troops entered Georgia to support South Ossetia. Again, he author says our youth are being used as cannon folder by Russia. Did Russia abduct these guys? Also, have Africans not been used as cannon folder by the US and other western countries? Don't they use citizenship to lure our citizens to join their military and fight for them? Did soldiers of African origin not die in Iraq and Afghanistan? You people should quit the hypocrisy |
| Re: How The Russia-Ukraine War Has Affected Africa by Edusouls(m): 1:40pm On Feb 23 |
Propaganda from the west cannot win a war, Ukraine is gone partially defeated and can never join NATO, Russia moved fast and got what they wanted, and mind you Africans would gladly fight for Russia than the west anytime any day |
| Re: How The Russia-Ukraine War Has Affected Africa by michael132(m): 1:46pm On Feb 23 |
Russia recruiting outside is a symbol of reservation of thier personel ..they dont want to be weak ...keep fighting and preserving thier personel n weapons ..cus if weak other countries will take advantage..thats what American understand n dts y they said Ukraine n Europe cannot defeat Russia.. Putin is so wise n dont rush things as he initially plan ... Let peace reign thats wat we all pray for |
| Re: How The Russia-Ukraine War Has Affected Africa by WriteerNg: 2:01pm On Feb 23 |
Western Propaganda! No Russian official dead or alive, not even Putin have EVER claimed the war will last only 3 days. An American General Mark Miley is the only living or dead person to claim Russia would win the war in 3 days.
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| Re: How The Russia-Ukraine War Has Affected Africa by AlphaTaikun: 2:02pm On Feb 23 |
AnonPoet:The high cost of wheat is a major fallout of the Ukraine-Russia War with Ukraine being the primary source of the worlds global wheat supply hence the high cost of bread and other confectionary. In Nigeria, 80% of bread ingredients are locally sourced but the remaining ingredients have to be imported. |
| Re: How The Russia-Ukraine War Has Affected Africa by WriteerNg: 2:02pm On Feb 23 |
michael132: Even Ukraine is recruiting from Africa. Ukraine has also recruited former ISIS members, prisoners, Colombians, Mexicans, Americans, Britons, Germans, Japanese, Australians, French, Poles and from every corner of the world. Look it up. The US recruited from Africa in its war against Iraq. |
| Re: How The Russia-Ukraine War Has Affected Africa by Smartguyboy(m): 2:03pm On Feb 23 |
Western propaganda to stop Africa from supporting Ukraine. When I saw the weapon I knew it just a propaganda a little research will inform you Russia don’t use AK47. The west are using the war and they want support. Ukraine are kidnapping their own citizens on the streets to force them to fight war they are not interested to fight and non of the western media have post it . Same war if you post anything about Russia in Europe they will sanction you .
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| Re: How The Russia-Ukraine War Has Affected Africa by richeeyo(m): 2:15pm On Feb 23 |
Smartguyboy:Go through what you personally typed |
| Re: How The Russia-Ukraine War Has Affected Africa by muyico(m): 2:31pm On Feb 23 |
American is using it to sell they re weapon |
| Re: How The Russia-Ukraine War Has Affected Africa by Omalicious1: 2:39pm On Feb 23 |
AnonPoet:Until African leaders stand their ground, this nonsense will continue. |
| Re: How The Russia-Ukraine War Has Affected Africa by Dwizeone: 2:55pm On Feb 23 |
There has been concerted efforts by the western media and Ukraine to cause outrage or make Africans hate Russia, but sorry it’s not relevant. Anyone who choose to fight for Russia either by force or intentionally does so not totally unknown irrespective of the circumstances leading to the decision. It’s a case of people in this case Africans making certain decisions because of economic reasons, largely as a result of their elders in Africa and not necessarily what Russia is doing per se. My 2 cent |
| Re: How The Russia-Ukraine War Has Affected Africa by CodeTemplar: 3:21pm On Feb 23 |
What about cost of bread? |
| Re: How The Russia-Ukraine War Has Affected Africa by AcadaWriter0: 3:30pm On Feb 23 |
It is articles like this that lays the foundation for racism and maltreatment of the African people in Europe and the US. The author failed to highlight that most Africans fighting for Russia are mercenaries, and they knew what they were getting into. Equally, African mercenaries are fighting for Ukraine. When the war ends, the 8ful ones in the West will point to this, and claim the African people fought against them. I honestly don't understand why people misconstrue facts when dealing with Africans? Maybe, they perceive the people to be 2pid, or something? From my subjective observation, I believe the EU nations have been the stumbling block to peace, through their disrespect for the relative strength of Russia. Without their pressure, the Trump administration would have ended the war. TOGETHER (they can't make a statement alone), the EU+UK always came up with one excuse or the other to stall reasonable peace talks. In my opinion, Russia and China deserve the same (or some of the) respect they accord the US. When the US k!dnap a sitting president, how many countries imposed sanctions on them? Note, I am not justifying the Russian invasion, but only arguing with the evidences we have seen and read. To add, I think the Ukrainians (, and others that share border with a bully) should learn how the Mexico relate with the US. |
| Re: How The Russia-Ukraine War Has Affected Africa by Moniya4Real(m): 3:43pm On Feb 23 |
But It Ukraine has Africans as fighters in their ranks as well naw |
| Re: How The Russia-Ukraine War Has Affected Africa by erniok(m): 4:31pm On Feb 23 |
Scorpio99:What were you expecting. He claimed ind8ans were recruiting Africans for the Russian armed forces and claimed he had tons of evidence, when pressed for it, told me to go find it. Writerng, come and clear this writer doubt. He doesn't know the truth about African recruitment. |
| Re: How The Russia-Ukraine War Has Affected Africa by erniok(m): 4:34pm On Feb 23 |
AcadaWriter0:Africans mercenaries? Writerng, is this you? So the Kenyan government that complained to Russia about deceiving its citizens or that of Sa that Zuma's daughter was involved in never happened? If you claimed most, can we see your stats proof? |
| Re: How The Russia-Ukraine War Has Affected Africa by erniok(m): 4:38pm On Feb 23 |
WriteerNg:You one time asked on this site that those with military experience/background who wishes to fight on Russian side should contact you. I don't have problem with that as they know what they are signing up for. What I'm str9ngly kicking about is recruitment via deception which you know Russia is guilty of. |
| Re: How The Russia-Ukraine War Has Affected Africa by erniok(m): 4:43pm On Feb 23 |
Edusouls:Speak for yourself and your ilk on laying down your lives for Russia or any nation. No one appointed you African mouthpiece |
| Re: How The Russia-Ukraine War Has Affected Africa by eepeepook: 4:59pm On Feb 23 |
Not my war, not my concern. |
| Re: How The Russia-Ukraine War Has Affected Africa by AcadaWriter0: 5:08pm On Feb 23 |
erniok:Okay, they were deceived to fight for Russia, and after the deception, they chained them and gave them toy gun to fight. Only the ev!l Russians are doing it. Happy? |
| Re: How The Russia-Ukraine War Has Affected Africa by WriteerNg: 5:10pm On Feb 23 |
erniok: Russia isn't guilty of that. Greedy third party agents are. It's all western propaganda. It's just like leaving the fake UK/US agents who promise Nigerians job abroad and help them process visas which turned out to be fake.... and blaming the UK/US government's. Instead of blaming the fake agents. |
| Re: How The Russia-Ukraine War Has Affected Africa by erniok(m): 5:15pm On Feb 23 |
AcadaWriter0:Whatever makes you happy pal. State it as it is. |
| Re: How The Russia-Ukraine War Has Affected Africa by erniok(m): 5:18pm On Feb 23 |
WriteerNg:Here we go again. The last time you claimed to have proof of this only send me looking for what you already had. The fake job scams were also discussed. I asked you to show what Russia is doing to stop this and your grid collapsed. I have no dog in this fight. Just get the right people, not through deception to fight on your side. |
| Re: How The Russia-Ukraine War Has Affected Africa by WriteerNg: 5:25pm On Feb 23 |
erniok: And i asked you why the fake job scams in the UK hasn't stopped despite the UK’s government "doing something" about it. Even as at last week we heard of a Nurse who got fake employment letters and papers and worked for months before she got busted. As for Russia, they have more important things to worry about and this problem is relatively new. Go their Ministry of Foreign Affairs website they've addressed the issue and have denied their involvement in it. But watch out for the next story. Find out the name of the agency that recruited them. Do your proper research and you'll find your answer. |
| Re: How The Russia-Ukraine War Has Affected Africa by erniok(m): 6:14pm On Feb 23 |
WriteerNg:Nothing so far. Had to stop at page 3 of my search. Can you share your l8nk to where this has been addressed on th site. On the scam continuing, men you are really something else . This is like saying shebi EFCC dey fight cybercrime, 2hy e never stop. You really funny my guy.
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