HomeEditor's ChoiceNigeria | A dodgy channel

Nigeria | A dodgy channel

Over a thousand prospective recruits are in the queue on Telegram

Beloved John

Late last year, the world was alerted to disturbing reports that Russia was recruiting hundreds of young African women, aged 18–22, to manufacture drones in a military-industrial compound called Alabuga, 1,000 km east of Moscow. The reports also stated that the recruits—from at least 15 African countries—were promised good salaries and skills training, but once there, they were often trapped, facing tax deductions, dangerous working conditions, strict surveillance, and difficulties in returning home.

In the past six months, a ZAM team in seven African countries investigated the Russian recruitment drive—and why so many young Africans take the chance to go, sometimes even after being warned. In Nigeria, Beloved John stood in a long queue of women trying to apply.

The Alabuga Start Programme says on its Telegram page that only those of us between 18 and 22 can apply, because “this is considered an ideal age range to begin building a career from scratch.” This may be so. But after going through the first part of the recruitment process myself, I begin to think there may be another reason. Maybe they just target impressionable youth? Maybe more mature adults would not put up with the badly written emails and long silences we get from our Human Resources (HR) recruiters? Or is our—perhaps youthful—desire to ‘japa’, to leave Nigeria, so strong that we will put up with anything at all?

There are no application windows, cycles or deadlines

When I register, I first discover that there is no application window. The process runs throughout the year; it has no cycle or deadlines. From messages by other applicants on the Telegram channel, I gather, after some time, that it usually spans a minimum of three to four months, but can extend up to a year. This is probably partly because we are in quite a queue here: over a thousand group members, from all over Africa.

My fellow applicants complain about poor communication: half-answered and repeated emails, or falling into a deep hole of silence after what seems like progress. “(Three months) is if you are lucky. It depends on how fast and responsive your HR specialist is,” Priscilla Eze (20), one of my co-applicants, tells me.

Not all is what it seems

Russia probably doesn’t have enough “HR specialists” to engage with all of us at once. There must be pre-selection criteria in place; however, we are not told what they are. The Alabuga scholarship, advertised on our Ministry of Education’s website, had only asked for a high school certificate and an 18–22 age range. It looked very appealing, with polished-sounding descriptions of salary, duration, structure, and skills training options. But going through the process, some of us start to doubt if all is what it seems.

When I start questioning Alabuga’s registration professionalism, I have already completed my short bio form on the Alabuga Start official website, providing my name, age, and contact details. From there, I am directed to the Telegram group page, where I find my co-applicants trying to enrol. That all interaction with Alabuga is conducted primarily on Telegram, unlike in most professional application processes, is the first thing that raises an eyebrow for me.

The message from the HR specialist contains a lightbulb and a heart

I must be making a good impression though, because it’s not long before I am assigned an “HR specialist” who says their name is Halilov Nurlan. But Nurlan’s communication is also not very professional. Their first message, sent simultaneously to my email, Telegram, and WhatsApp accounts, has no subject line and contains both grammatical errors and random emojis, like a wave, a lightbulb, and a heart.

Later in the process, interacting not only with Nurlan but also with other “human resource specialists,” I am asked to submit a video essay which details my “work experience,”—even though the scholarship is advertised as available to students at high school level. They then also want me to scan and submit every single page of my passport. Asked about this, Nurlan responds that this is for processing “a visa and a migration card, like it is done for all foreign residents who come to Russia.” Thereafter, I am told I must still submit a medical examination result that proves I don’t have a ‘chronic condition,’ do a simulation test, and learn 100 Russian words.

The Russian embassy is the last step

It all becomes a bridge too far for me, and I jump ship. Fellow applicants who stay on board tell me later that they were informed by their “HR specialists” that their data had been processed and sent, first to the Russian Ministry of Foreign Affairs and then to the Russian embassy in Nigeria. One of them, Elizabeth Ojewale, tells me that, at the end, “they will send your document to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs to issue you an invitation to come to Russia.” Another, Grace Onochie, adds, “You will book an appointment with the embassy in Abuja (Nigeria) for your visa. Then Alabuga will book your flight, and then you go.”

A deleted message

Most applicants I have been talking to have persisted throughout the dodgy process, even after seeing warnings about Alabuga. Only Fatimah Yusuf tells me she has begun to reconsider her decision to enrol in Alabuga Start, after noticing that an inquiry about the programme was quietly deleted from the Telegram group page. The deleted post, shared by an unknown user on 17 August, was a screenshot of ChatGPT’s response to a “concern about Alabuga Start” prompt. The first sentence in the image reads, “deceptive recruitment,” and another reads, “exploitation and poor working conditions.” The user shared the screenshot with the caption, “Tell me.”

Yusuf had been alarmed by the post but, she says, she hoped a response from the Alabuga group admin would clarify the misconception. Seven hours later, she found that the message had been deleted from the group. “I don’t know anymore. I don’t think I want to continue. I am so confused. I have devoted so much of my time to this,” she said. “I just checked myself. It’s true.”

The video said there were “no downsides” and “no racism”

Her disappointment was palpable, since for her the programme had represented the opportunity of a lifetime. Yusuf had, she said, completed secondary school three years earlier but was unable to continue to university due to financial constraints; she was now sitting at home, frustrated. She had felt energised, thinking she had found a new purpose, when she came across social media posts and videos of young women who purported to be at Alabuga—like an Ethiopian participant portrayed in an advertorial published on both our Daily Post and Pulse Nigeria sites, who had been quoted as saying she was “happy with her career growth”; and one fellow Nigerian, Victoria Kilani, whose “testimonial” that there were “no downsides” and “no racism” at Alabuga was published by Weekly Africa Magazine.

That the “interviews” were not the original work of the media that carried them, but simply copied from Alabuga PR texts, was probably unclear to Fatima Yusuf and others like her. Combined with Alabuga’s animated images and motion graphics on Telegram, WhatsApp, X, and other social media platforms, which regularly featured young fictional characters from poor economic backgrounds who went on to achieve success at Alabuga, the PR posts had filled Yusuf with hope. “The problem has been money,” Yusuf had told me. “With Alabuga, they told me you can make money and go to a university after you finish the programme. But now I can’t do it. I cannot risk it,” she had ended, sadly.

Unfazed

Unlike Fatimah Yusuf, however, Nneka Amadi, from Lagos, has remained unfazed by the warnings. “I haven’t secured admission into a university. I don’t have the funds. My parents couldn’t sponsor me. A scholarship (to Alabuga) will be my only escape route.”

Parents try to register their daughters

Even if one has the funds, it is not easy to get into higher education in Nigeria. Data from the country’s Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board (JAMB) show that over one million young people seek admission each year but are denied access. Yomi Fawehinmi, an educationist, researcher, and human resources professional, says he understands very well why youth would hope for an opportunity such as that seemingly offered by Alabuga. “Getting into a university is a significant challenge in Nigeria, especially when you consider the rising level of poverty,” he said.

As a result, it’s not just young people themselves who flock to the Alabuga opportunity. In the Telegram channel, but also in a dedicated WhatsApp group, I even find parents trying to enrol their daughters, siblings researching or asking follow-up questions on behalf of relatives, and prospective applicants seeking guidance on the admission process.

Japa

Generally, opportunities in Russia are increasingly familiar terrain for those who try to ‘japa’, as the term goes, escape from Nigeria’s worsening prospects. Thousands of Nigerians have already studied in Russia in recent years. The Russia–Nigeria Bilateral Education Agreement (BEA), jointly administered by the Russian Ministry of Education and its Nigerian counterpart through the Federal Scholarship Board (FSB), is the primary driver of this cooperation. Each year, the Russian government grants scholarships to about 100 Nigerian students. According to the Nigerian embassy in Russia, more than 2,500 Nigerian students are currently enrolled in universities across Russia, particularly in cities such as Moscow, St Petersburg, Kazan, Belgorod, Rostov, Voronezh, Kursk, and Samara. However, although advertised on Nigeria’s Ministry of Education web portal, Alabuga Polytech is not among them.

The official says he “doesn’t know” about the website post

Reaching out to the Ministry of Education to inquire why the scholarship was on its website, I was directed to the Federal Scholarship Board, which I was told oversees such listings. A response from FSB Director Ndajiwo Hammanjoda Asta states that neither her agency nor the Ministry itself have “involvement” with the Alabuga project. “Whatever is on the website, it was made by fraudulent persons trying to use the Ministry. We have never issued any statement endorsing Alabuga,” Hammanjoda Asta says. “The Ministry did not authorise it. Let the public know about this. Anyone can draft a letter and upload it to a known website.”

Remarkably, two press statements endorsing the programme have also been published on the Ministry’s website. Both statements carried the ministry’s logo and were presented on its official website as an endorsement of the programme. FSB official Chris Eje admits, in line with the comment made by Hammanjoda Asta, that fraudulent institutions “sometimes hack” the ministry’s website “to upload fake reports and press releases advertising fake educational opportunities.” “If anything, this is a deceptive tactic used to give the programme credibility,” he said. “A scammer published this.” When asked why the false statements have not been taken down, he says, “I don’t know.”

A network of recruiters

Besides using social media channels, Alabuga Start has also contracted employment and travel agencies in Nigeria to recruit young women. Some of these have substantial social media followings and use persuasive marketing posts to attract applicants. Adeleke Oluwatobi, director of one of these, called “Mercy of Success Konsultant,” tells me that “There is a network of recruiters. We (Mercy) have signed a memorandum of understanding with them (Alabuga).”

Initially reluctant to share the agreement his agency has with Alabuga, saying, “It’s a confidential document. I have to be careful,” he eventually shares a video recording of a three-page document titled “Memorandum of Understanding between Special Economic Zone of an Industrial and Production Type ‘Alabuga’ and MOS Konsultant.” The document, written in both English and Russian, states that the agreement has been drafted to develop and strengthen cooperation between “parties in the field of employment in Nigeria under the programme Alabuga Start.” It adds that the recruiter is mandated to “disseminate information about the (Alabuga) programme to potential participants” and to “provide support in establishing contacts with other structures or organisations that may be interested in helping to disseminate information about (the) programme.”

Medical testers must be approved by the Russian embassy

Another part of the document indicates that the recruiter is obliged to assist with the arrival of applicants to the Alabuga Special Economic Zone in Russia from Nigeria, and yet another part states that the agency is expected to “send participants of the programme to medical centers approved by the Embassy of the Russian Federation to undergo medical examination and obtain confirmation of the absence of the following medical conditions: HIV/AIDS, syphilis, tuberculosis, Hepatitis A, B, C, D, E, pregnancy, and an X-ray.”

Next to Mercy, the Topklass Erasco Travel & Tours agency also recruits for Alabuga in Nigeria. Branding herself as the “face of Alabuga” in Nigeria, Topklass director Cynthia Orah frequently posts promotional content about the programme on her official TikTok account, which has over 29,000 followers. When I contact her with concerns about the nature of the Alabuga programme and its recruitment process, she says this is all “false information.”

The agency director feels “insulted”

Both Topklass Erasco and Mercy are registered businesses under the Nigerian Corporate Affairs Commission (CAC). Both Mercy’s director, Oluwatobi, and Topklass’s Cynthia Orah insist that they are also recognised by the Nigerian government as recruiters for foreign companies. However, a licence from the Ministry of Labour is required for such a purpose [https://lawsofnigeria.placng.org/laws/L1.pdf], and the Ministry, when asked about Topklass and Mercy, states that these are “not on the list of licensed private employment agencies.” When I ask both agencies’ directors for a response to this finding, Orah only says she feels “insulted” and will no longer be interacting with me. Mercy’s Oluwatobi does not respond at all.

Russian denial

Since the Telegram channel discussions reflect that the Russian Embassy in Nigeria is the final step in the Alabuga registration process, I try to engage Ambassador Andrey Podelyshev at a press briefing held by him, but all my questions are met with denial. He says he can’t tell me how many visas his embassy has granted to Nigerian Alabuga applicants and that he also cannot comment on the welfare of participants in the programme. “The embassy does not have any relationship with Alabuga,” he states, adding that he “knows little” about the programme. He insists, however, that foreign participants are not recruited to assemble military drones, as “Russian legislation prohibits this. For anyone to work in the plant, they must obtain clearance from the security agency.”

The Nigerian embassy does not respond to queries

Hopeful that I may receive cooperation or insights from our ambassador Abdullah Shehu at the Nigerian Embassy in Russia—he visited the site and posed with participants already in 2023 [https://alabugatruth.com/useful-idiot/abdullahi-y-shehu/], so he must have access—I am disappointed again. No reply comes to my query regarding Nigerian participants’ welfare in the Alabuga Special Economic Zone, or regarding the possibility of facilitating a meeting with them. Likewise, the Nigerian Ministry of Foreign Affairs does not respond to the question of whether it is aware of any programme that invites young Nigerian women to Russia.

“Life has defeated you 4-0 by making you Nigerian”

Meanwhile, the Alabuga Telegram channel keeps growing, with many applicants still joining the queue; the complaints about delays likewise seem neverending. At some point, my compatriot Nneka Amadi—the one who told me that Alabuga was her “escape route” out of Nigeria—seems to have had enough. Lashing out on the group in early August, she writes, “God knows that my deadline for Alabuga is August 31. If I don’t have my visa by then, I’ll scratch (forget) everything about them and won’t encourage anyone else to apply. Imagine spending money to get a visa and then having no flight ticket (…) Will that money be refunded to me?”

Two weeks later, Amadi has given in, reconciled to the fact that she has yet to invest more money for her chance to travel. After writing: “Life has defeated you 4 – 0 by making you Nigerian,” she resignedly tells me that the recruiters did not book her flight (yet) and that she will now apply for another visa. “And that will cost me more money.”

*Names have been changed for privacy and security reasons.


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