Cuba has uncovered a human trafficking ring aimed at recruiting Cubans to fight as mercenaries for Russia in its war in Ukraine, its foreign ministry has said, as Moscow seeks to increase the size of its forces.
In a statement, the Cuban foreign ministry said the authorities were working to “neutralise and dismantle” the network, which it said was operating within the Caribbean island nation and in Russia.
“The ministry of the interior … is working on the neutralisation and dismantling of a human trafficking network that operates from Russia to incorporate Cuban citizens living there, and even some from Cuba, into the military forces participating in war operations in Ukraine,” the ministry statement said.
“Cuba has a firm and clear historical position against the use of mercenaries … Cuba is not part of the war in Ukraine.”
The foreign ministry did not comment on whether any Cubans joined the war in Ukraine as part of the trafficking ring, or if the ring had any connections to the Russian government.
Last May the Russian regional newspaper Ryazan Gazette said “several Cuban citizens” had signed up with the Russian forces fighting in Ukraine, but it was not clear if the Cuban foreign ministry statement is linked to the reports in Ryazan Gazette.
The invasion of Ukraine has resurrected a former cold war alliance between an increasingly isolated Russia and an impoverished Cuba. Havana’s public statements on Monday are a rare moment of friction between the two countries.
There has not yet been a response from Moscow. Russia has used mercenaries as part of its war effort, most notably the Wagner group.
Communist-run Cuba, traditionally a close ally of Russia, has previously criticised the west for provoking the war in Ukraine while its president, Miguel Díaz-Canel, said Russia enjoys “Cuba’s unconditional support” in its “clash with the west”.
Russia for its part has suggested placing arms in Cuba if talks with the west on European security and Ukraine fail to go its way.
The Cuban allegations come amid Russian attempts to boost the size of its armed forces as it seeks to continue the fighting in Ukraine. Andrey Gurulev, a la