The Association of Nigerien Students in Russia (AENR) has confirmed the death of Adamou Abdoulaye Ismaël, who had been missing for several months. In June 2025, the organisation issued a search notice for two of its members with whom it had lost contact. One of them, Abdoulaye Issiaka Ismaël, had already been declared dead on the front lines of the war between Russia and Ukraine. The death of Adamou Abdoulaye Ismaël is now confirmed, although the exact circumstances of his disappearance have not yet been made public.
This announcement once again plunges many Nigerien families into incomprehension and grief. Above all, it raises an increasingly troubling question: why are young Nigeriens becoming involved in a conflict taking place thousands of kilometres from their country, one that in no way concerns Niger’s national interests?
With this new tragic loss, Niger loses yet another of its sons in a war that is not its own. As Moscow strengthens its influence in Africa and multiplies its rhetoric on partnership, cooperation and friendship between peoples, these deaths recall a much darker reality. Behind the promises of scholarships, academic or professional opportunities, some young Africans find themselves swept up in the consequences of a conflict in which they are neither actors nor beneficiaries.
Since the start of the war in Ukraine, several international media outlets and human rights organisations have documented cases of foreign nationals, particularly from Africa, being recruited or trained for the Russian war effort, sometimes under opaque conditions. For many observers, this raises a major ethical issue: seeing young people who came to study or seek a better future exposed to the risks of an especially deadly armed conflict.
The successive deaths of two Nigerien students are a warning sign. They call into question the protection of African nationals in Russia and the true human cost of the rapprochement between Moscow and several African states. Because beyond diplomatic speeches and geopolitical interests, it is African lives that are being lost on Ukrainian battlefields.
Today, two Nigerien families mourn their children. Two young men who left to pursue their studies abroad and will never return. A tragedy that reminds us that in great international rivalries, the heaviest sacrifices are often borne by those who never chose the war.
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