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Ukraine war: Are Turkish mercenaries being sent to fight for Russia?

A video has been gaining traction on social media allegedly showing Turkish mercenaries going to fight for Russia in the Ukraine war.

The video shows two soldiers holding a Turkish flag and expressing their readiness to get involved in the conflict. 

"We are coming there with the help of Allah. We have our flag... We are gonna go and come back with the help of Allah," says a man with a Turkish flag attached to his bulletproof vest. 

The second individual in the video is holding a Turkish flag and his uniform has a Turkish and Russian flag sown onto it. 

The letter 'Z' is visible on the Russian flag - a symbol of Russia's invasion of Ukraine, signalling that the video is a recent one.

The clip was first published on Monday by a pro-Russian Telegram channel claiming that "Turkish legionnaires joined the Russian army and will take part in combat operations in Ukraine".

But it quickly gained traction when Nexta shared it with a similar claim, racking more than 750,000 views on Twitter.

But are Turkish mercenaries really being sent to Ukraine? 

Journalists from Euronews Turkish-language service confirmed that the men are speaking a dialect of Turkish but are not from Turkey. 

The mix between this dialect and some Russian words signals that these men are most likely Ahiska Turks (also known as Meskhetian Turks).

According to the World Directory of Minorities and Indigenous Peoples, Meskhetian Turks used to live along the Turkish-Georgian border and were deported in 1944 by Joseph Stalin to various Central Asian Soviet republics, such as Uzbekistan and Kazakhstan.

In June 1989, Ahiska Turks in Uzbekistan were attacked by Uzbeks and more than 100 were killed. As a result, Soviet troops deported over 87,000 Ahiska Turks to Russia

Today,

Read more on euronews.com