The Japan Times - Bangladesh families seek sons feared fighting for Russia

EUR -
AED 4.10904
AFN 78.863482
ALL 98.278538
AMD 434.147603
ANG 2.002125
AOA 1025.853859
ARS 1258.521843
AUD 1.726332
AWG 2.016468
AZN 1.899328
BAM 1.969454
BBD 2.257784
BDT 135.861945
BGN 1.956057
BHD 0.421723
BIF 3284.521123
BMD 1.118706
BND 1.459539
BOB 7.726673
BRL 6.273594
BSD 1.118268
BTN 95.383583
BWP 15.265565
BYN 3.659521
BYR 21926.639653
BZD 2.246183
CAD 1.557569
CDF 3211.805302
CHF 0.938589
CLF 0.027418
CLP 1052.145362
CNY 8.061788
CNH 8.06855
COP 4711.710437
CRC 568.247337
CUC 1.118706
CUP 29.645712
CVE 110.891713
CZK 24.922545
DJF 198.816308
DKK 7.459633
DOP 65.890023
DZD 149.321507
EGP 56.452137
ERN 16.780592
ETB 148.901695
FJD 2.529372
FKP 0.84811
GBP 0.840887
GEL 3.064837
GGP 0.84811
GHS 14.235545
GIP 0.84811
GMD 80.546635
GNF 9682.401323
GTQ 8.597608
GYD 233.947802
HKD 8.735159
HNL 28.829175
HRK 7.533148
HTG 146.205619
HUF 403.905503
IDR 18543.22491
ILS 3.984541
IMP 0.84811
INR 95.182704
IQD 1465.504997
IRR 47097.526898
ISK 145.710884
JEP 0.84811
JMD 178.145098
JOD 0.793496
JPY 164.670223
KES 144.862493
KGS 97.8304
KHR 4496.079434
KMF 492.788778
KPW 1006.830459
KRW 1583.85851
KWD 0.343677
KYD 0.931844
KZT 568.39806
LAK 24186.426277
LBP 100180.132018
LKR 334.176883
LRD 223.321644
LSL 20.505691
LTL 3.303248
LVL 0.676694
LYD 6.169646
MAD 10.404592
MDL 19.546166
MGA 5017.396757
MKD 61.528361
MMK 2348.706109
MNT 3998.141492
MOP 8.976173
MRU 44.302835
MUR 51.94122
MVR 17.283623
MWK 1942.073663
MXN 21.723975
MYR 4.824989
MZN 71.496415
NAD 20.506017
NGN 1792.648044
NIO 41.140403
NOK 11.593372
NPR 152.608641
NZD 1.881965
OMR 0.430697
PAB 1.118233
PEN 4.095863
PGK 4.556211
PHP 62.450091
PKR 315.195841
PLN 4.23818
PYG 8930.032573
QAR 4.07265
RON 5.103648
RSD 118.039966
RUB 89.327875
RWF 1588.562669
SAR 4.195729
SBD 9.353893
SCR 15.916048
SDG 671.769997
SEK 10.876486
SGD 1.456158
SHP 0.879127
SLE 25.450326
SLL 23458.707902
SOS 639.33595
SRD 40.821419
STD 23154.957709
SVC 9.784971
SYP 14546.886641
SZL 20.505614
THB 37.258519
TJS 11.595687
TMT 3.921065
TND 3.381287
TOP 2.620122
TRY 43.406351
TTD 7.588647
TWD 33.892659
TZS 3006.513574
UAH 46.47222
UGX 4092.428099
USD 1.118706
UYU 46.703802
UZS 14470.463718
VES 103.979232
VND 29033.220183
VUV 134.214729
WST 3.108376
XAF 660.524677
XAG 0.03425
XAU 0.000346
XCD 3.023359
XDR 0.821843
XOF 643.848667
XPF 119.331742
YER 273.467764
ZAR 20.497224
ZMK 10069.707987
ZMW 29.632845
ZWL 360.222909
  • RBGPF

    63.8100

    63.81

    +100%

  • CMSC

    -0.0200

    22.06

    -0.09%

  • BCC

    0.6100

    93.71

    +0.65%

  • SCS

    -0.1100

    10.71

    -1.03%

  • GSK

    -1.0200

    36.35

    -2.81%

  • NGG

    0.0000

    67.53

    0%

  • BTI

    -0.2900

    40.69

    -0.71%

  • JRI

    -0.1300

    12.88

    -1.01%

  • CMSD

    0.0900

    22.39

    +0.4%

  • RELX

    0.5700

    52.4

    +1.09%

  • RIO

    0.8600

    62.27

    +1.38%

  • BP

    0.3700

    30.56

    +1.21%

  • AZN

    -1.2300

    67.72

    -1.82%

  • RYCEF

    0.3200

    10.7

    +2.99%

  • BCE

    -0.5800

    21.98

    -2.64%

  • VOD

    -0.0100

    9.06

    -0.11%

Bangladesh families seek sons feared fighting for Russia
Bangladesh families seek sons feared fighting for Russia / Photo: Olga MALTSEVA - AFP/File

Bangladesh families seek sons feared fighting for Russia

Young Bangladeshi men desperate for work allege they have been tricked into fighting for Russia against Ukraine, with the reported death of a 22-year-old sparking a surge of worried calls.

Text size:

Bangladesh's embassy in Moscow has said around a dozen families have contacted them seeking to bring back their sons they allege were duped into joining the Russian army.

"We had no idea we'd end up on the battlefield," said Mohammad Akram Hossain, who claimed he and his brother-in-law had registered with a recruiting agency and were originally promised jobs in Cyprus, before being offered work in Russia.

"The recruiting agency said that only work visas for Russia were available, and we agreed to go," the 26-year-old told AFP, now back home in the South Asian nation.

"But we never imagined we would be abandoned like that."

Unemployment is high in Bangladesh and the economy was hit hard by protests last year that toppled the government.

Worried relatives have been messaging Bangladeshi diplomats in Moscow after one family said their son Mohammed Yasin Sheikh, 22, was killed on March 27 while serving in the Russian army.

Abul Hashem, Sheikh's uncle, said the family was called by his friend during the Muslim holiday of Eid at the end of March.

"Yasin's friend, who is also fighting for the Russian side and a Bangladeshi, called us on Eid and informed us that Yasin had been killed," Hashem told AFP.

"Later, we received a call from a Russian commander."

- 'Dead body' -

Sheikh's family say they gave him money to travel when he left Bangladesh in September 2024, after a broker promised him work with a Chinese company in Russia as an electrician. But, they said, he ended up joining the Russian army in December.

"We spent a lot to send him, and now we are waiting for his dead body," Hashem said.

"We've requested the Bangladesh government to take steps so that his mother can bid him farewell."

AFP could not independently verify the family's claims.

But Farhad Hossain, Bangladesh's charge d'affaires in Moscow, said the embassy was aware of the reported casualty.

"We learned about Md Yasin Sheikh a few days ago, and have engaged with our Russian counterparts on the issue," he said, adding that the embassy could not confirm his death, or any other Bangladeshi casualties, and was awaiting a response from Moscow.

But Hossain did confirm that other Bangladeshis had contacted the embassy.

"We've been receiving requests from parents seeking information about their sons, and so far we've responded to around a dozen requests," he said.

The war in Ukraine has taken a heavy toll on Russian troops, and Moscow has been on a global quest for more forces to fight.

Neither Russia nor Ukraine will say how many foreigners are serving in their militaries or how many they are holding as prisoners of war.

Recruits from several South Asian nations -- including India, Nepal and Sri Lanka -- have already been reported to have fought for Russia against Ukraine, lured by promises of work.

Hossain told AFP that Russian authorities have said those fighting on the side of Moscow had signed contracts, were on the payroll and were governed by the rules of war.

He could not confirm how many Bangladeshis were thought to have joined Russia's army, although one Bangladeshi newspaper cited security sources suggesting there were more than 100.

- 'Begging us' -

In Bangladesh's capital Dhaka, Mustafizur Rahman, superintendent of police at the Criminal Investigation Department, said one Bangladeshi woman had been arrested in connection with alleged human trafficking, and six other cases had been opened.

"Operations are ongoing to arrest the others," Rahman said.

Mohammad Akram Hossain, the man who claims to have escaped Moscow's army, was among the first to alert Bangladeshi police of the trafficking network he said brought him to Russia.

He said he was part of a group of 10 Bangladeshis who flew first to Saudi Arabia on a pilgrimage visa in September 2024.

"After staying there a few weeks, we flew to Russia," he said, adding he was then given a contract in Russian that he could not understand but signed anyway.

"From St. Petersburg, we were taken by bus to a camp where we spent the night," he added.

"The next morning, they gave military uniforms to some of us and took them away for training."

Before being taken to fight, Mohammad Akram Hossain said he escaped -- along with a group of men from Senegal -- and managed to fly home.

"I returned after losing several thousand dollars," he said, adding his brother-in-law remains in Russia in the army.

"He calls home regularly, begging us to get him back to Bangladesh."

K.Inoue--JT