NAIROBI, Kenya — Kenyan police have arrested Festus Omwamba, a man identified by returned recruits as a key figure in an alleged trafficking network that lured Kenyans to Russia with promises of civilian jobs, only for many to end up fighting on the front lines in Ukraine. Authorities say Omwamba was detained in Moyale, near the Ethiopian border, and charged in Nairobi on Thursday with trafficking 25 Kenyans last year.
The arrest follows mounting pressure from families seeking answers about relatives who vanished after leaving Kenya for what they believed were jobs such as plumbing, electrical work and other skilled labor. An Associated Press report said multiple recruits identified Omwamba as the man who handled visa applications and travel arrangements, often avoiding written communication and relying on calls or in-person meetings.
The broader scale of the recruitment has alarmed Nairobi. A Kenyan intelligence report presented to Parliament last week said more than 1,000 Kenyans had been recruited to fight for Russia in Ukraine. Of those, 89 were still on the front line, 39 were hospitalized, 28 were missing in action, and at least one had been confirmed dead, while others had returned home. That report also pointed to possible collusion between rogue recruitment agencies and officials on both the Kenyan and Russian sides. Reuters, citing the intelligence findings, said the network allegedly involved traffickers, immigration facilitators, airport personnel, and staff linked to the Russian Embassy in Nairobi and the Kenyan Embassy in Moscow.
Russia has denied recruiting Kenyans for combat. The Russian Embassy in Nairobi said it did not issue visas to people intending to fight in Ukraine, but added that Russian law allows foreigners to voluntarily enlist in the armed forces. For survivors, the experience has been described as a betrayal. Returned recruits told AP they arrived expecting civilian work, only to have passports confiscated, be taken to military camps, and then be deployed toward the battlefield. One returnee, John Kamau, said he later sought refuge at Kenya’s embassy in Moscow after escaping the front.
Omwamba’s arrest is one of the clearest signs yet that Kenya is moving from public concern to criminal enforcement. But with dozens still missing, hospitalized, or trapped in the war zone, the case is also a reminder that the larger recruitment pipeline may not yet be fully dismantled.



















