Africans recruited to work in Russia say they were duped into building drones for use in Ukraine
요약
보고된 날짜: 2024년 11월 25일
위치: 러시아
기업 페이지
TikTok (part of ByteDance) - Other Value Chain Entity , Telegram - Other Value Chain Entity , ByteDance - Parent Company , Meta (formerly Facebook) - Other Value Chain Entity기타
Not Reported ( 무기 ) - Employer영향받은
영향받은 사람의 수: 숫자를 알 수 없음
Migrant & immigrant workers: ( 숫자를 알 수 없음 - 우간다 , 제조: 일반 , Women , Unknown migration status ) , Migrant & immigrant workers: ( 숫자를 알 수 없음 - 아프리카 , 제조: 일반 , Women , Unknown migration status )토픽들
계약 대체 , 이동 제한 , 산업 안전 및 보건 , 휴가 박탈 , 사생활권 , 표현의 자유 , 강간과 성적 학대 , 감시결과
응답 요청 여부: 예, Resource Centre에 의해 요청됨
응답을 포함하는 스토리: (더 알아보기)
시행된 조치: In November, the Business & Human Rights Resource Centre invited Meta, Telegram and TikTok to respond to the article, and to disclose whether they have identified the ‘Alabuga Start’ scheme being advertised on their pages, whether they determine these contravene community guidelines, and how they are responding to the emerging trend of recruitment from Africa to Russian weapons factories. TikTok and Meta responded. Telegram did not respond.
출처: News outlet
… The social media ads promised the young African women a free plane ticket, money and a faraway adventure in Europe. Just complete a computer game and a 100-word Russian vocabulary test.
But instead of a work-study program in fields like hospitality and catering, some of them learned only after arriving on the steppes of Russia’s Tatarstan region that they would be toiling in a factory to make weapons of war, assembling thousands of Iranian-designed attack drones to be launched into Ukraine.
In interviews with The Associated Press, some of the women complained of long hours under constant surveillance, of broken promises about wages and areas of study, and of working with caustic chemicals that left their skin pockmarked and itching.
To fill an urgent labor shortage in wartime Russia, the Kremlin has been recruiting women aged 18-22 from places like Uganda, Rwanda, Kenya, South Sudan, Sierra Leone and Nigeria…
Officials held recruiting events in Uganda, and tried to recruit from its orphanages, according to messages on Alabuga’s Telegram channel…
That could be due to its hiring of influencers, including Bassie, a South African with almost 800,000 TikTok and Instagram followers. She did not respond to an AP request for comment…