cross-posted from: https://scribe.disroot.org/post/6632613
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Polina Azarnykh, a 40-year-old former teacher, uses a Telegram channel to lure young men, often from poor countries, into joining Russia’s military.
The former teacher’s smiling video messages and upbeat posts offer “one-year contracts” for “military service”.
The BBC World Service has identified nearly 500 cases where she has provided documents, referred to as invitations, which allow the recipient to enter Russia to join the military. These have been for men - mainly from Syria, Egypt and Yemen - who appear to have sent her their passport details in order to enlist.
But recruits and their relatives have told the BBC that she misled men into believing they would avoid combat, failed to make clear they could not leave after a year and threatened those who challenged her. When contacted by the BBC, she rejected the allegations.
Twelve families told us of young men they say were recruited by her who are now dead or missing.
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Azarnykh’s Telegram channel has 21,000 subscribers. Her posts have often told readers wanting to apply to join the Russian military to send her a scan of their passport. She has then posted invitation documents, sometimes with a list of names of the men they are for.
The BBC has identified more than 490 such invitations that she has sent over the past year to men from countries including Yemen, Syria, Egypt, Morocco, Iraq, Ivory Coast and Nigeria.
Her posts have mentioned recruitment for an “elite international battalion” and made it clear that people in Russia illegally - including those whose visas have expired - are eligible.
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Many felt Azarnykh had misled or exploited recruits. They told us the men knew they were joining the military, but did not expect to serve on the front line. Several, like Omar, felt they had inadequate training or thought they would be able to leave after a year.
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Azarnykh became “one of the most important recruiters” for Russia’s army, says Habib, another Syrian who has served in Russia’s military. He was willing to be filmed but spoke under a pseudonym for fear of repercussions.
Habib says he and Azarnykh “worked together for around three years on visa invitations to Russia”. He gave no further details and we have not been able to confirm his role in the process. An image from social media in 2024 shows him alongside her.
Azarnykh, who is from Russia’s south-western Voronezh region, ran a Facebook group helping Arab students come to Moscow to study, before starting her Telegram channel in 2024.
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Azarnykh’s posts from mid-2024 begin to note that recruits will be “participating in hostilities” and mention foreign fighters who have died in combat.
“You all understood well that you were going to war,” she says in one video in October 2024. “You thought that you could get a Russian passport, do nothing and live in a five-star hotel?.. Nothing happens for free.”
In another case, in 2024, the BBC has heard a voice message sent by Azarnykh to a mother whose son was serving in the military. Azarnykh says the woman has “published something horrible about the Russian army”. Using expletives, she threatens the son’s life and warns the woman: “I’ll find you and all your children.”
The BBC made multiple attempts to contact Azarnykh. Initially she said she would do an interview with us if we travelled to Russia, but the BBC declined for safety reasons. Later, when asked in a voice call about claims that recruits were promised non-combat roles, she hung up. In voice notes sent afterwards, she said our work was “not professional” and warned of potential defamation proceedings. She also said: “Our respected Arabs can stick their accusations up their arses.”
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Cleansing the unethical.