Nov. 6 (UPI) — South African President Cyril Ramaphosa has ordered an investigation into how at least 17 South African citizens ended up fighting as mercenaries in the Donbas region of Ukraine, most of which is occupied or annexed by Russia.
Ramaphosa’s office issued a statement Thursday saying the government is looking into the matter after being contacted by the men for assistance. However, the statement did not specify which side the men were fighting for.
“The government of South Africa has received distress calls for assistance to return home from 17 South African men, between the ages of 20 and 39 years, who are trapped in the war-torn Donbas, Ukraine,” the statement said. “The 17, 16 of whom come from KwaZulu-Natal and one from the Eastern Cape, were lured to join mercenary forces involved in the Ukraine-Russia war under the pretext of lucrative employment contracts.”
The government is currently working through diplomatic channels to secure the return of the men while investigating the circumstances surrounding their recruitment into what appear to be mercenary activities.
President Ramaphosa and the South African government strongly condemn the exploitation of young, vulnerable people by individuals associated with foreign military entities, government spokesman Vincent Magwenya said.
Under South African law, citizens, companies, and organizations are prohibited from providing military assistance to foreign governments or joining their armed forces without government permission.
The issue is compounded by high unemployment rates in South Africa. Almost a third of South Africans are unemployed, with youth unemployment even higher. Large numbers of people live below the poverty line, and KwaZulu-Natal and the Eastern Cape—where most of the mercenaries originated—are among the poorest provinces in the country.
KwaZulu-Natal has the largest poverty gap in South Africa, accounting for more than a fifth of the nation’s $4.7 billion total. The poverty gap measures how much household incomes must increase to reach the poverty line, according to the Human Sciences Research Council.
In related news, the BBC reported Wednesday that South African women are working in Russian arms factories within a special economic zone in Tatarstan. These women, primarily recruited under the promise of professional-level logistics, catering, and hospitality training, are reportedly building drones under dangerous conditions and receiving lower pay than promised.
The Alabuga Start program, which recruits young women mostly from Africa, Latin America, and Southeast Asia, has denied all allegations of mistreatment.
Russia has been recruiting fighting forces from its allies to bolster its three-and-a-half-year war on Ukraine and to replace some of the more than 281,000 Russian forces reported killed, wounded, missing, or captured.
In April, Kyiv announced it had documentary evidence of at least 155 Chinese nationals fighting alongside Russian forces.
https://www.upi.com/Top_News/World-News/2025/11/06/South-African-mercenaries-Ukraine-war/1911762420714/