
Putin's 'dark destroyer' factory: Inside 'world's biggest drone plant' in Russia where army of teens make kamikaze killing machines to unleash on Ukraine
Located in a highly secretive complex in Yelabuga, Tatarstan, it employs teenagers to help build lethal kamikaze drones used in strikes on Ukraine.
Footage broadcast by the Russian military's Zvezda TV channel shows rows of Gen-2 drones lined up inside the plant, ready to be deployed.
The unnamed aerial vehicles are Russian-made versions of Iran 's Shahed-136 and have been used in deadly attacks on Ukrainian cities.
Their black matte paint is designed to reduce visibility during night-time missions and evade air defence detection.
The Alabuga plant is more than 1,000 kilometres from Ukraine's border and is part of a state-run special economic zone.
Its director has boasted that production has exceeded expectations. Some reports suggest up to 18,000 units were built in the first half of 2025 alone.
It's been reported that teenage students from the nearby Alabuga Polytechnic College are being trained in weapons manufacturing from the age of 14 or 15.
Once they complete their education, many transition directly to the factory floor to join the assembly line.
Footage shows these teenagers working on components, programming drones, and carrying out testing tasks, their faces blurred to conceal identities.
Critics say this represents a dangerous militarisation of education, where children are being groomed into the defence industry and made to contribute directly to a brutal war.
Reports from Russian media and leaked testimonies reveal that students are subjected to long working hours, sometimes without breaks, and are paid modest wages of about $335 to $445 per month.
Contracts ban them from speaking about their work and impose severe financial penalties of up to $22,000 for violations.
Families who resist or refuse participation can be forced to repay thousands of dollars in training costs, with surveillance reportedly used to enforce compliance.
The drones produced at Alabuga have a range of up to 1,800 kilometres and are equipped with warheads capable of inflicting widespread destruction.
Although Russia insists its drone strikes only target military sites, Ukraine and international observers accuse Moscow of using them to terrorise civilians.
Kyiv has repeatedly reported drone attacks on residential areas, including the capital, where people take cover in underground shelters during nightly bombardments.
The factory has also been linked to high-profile drone launches using repurposed American pickup trucks, which have been filmed carrying and firing the Geran-2.
Russian state media showcased this as part of a broader campaign to boost public support for the war effort. President Vladimir Putin has called for an urgent increase in drone production, claiming more than 1.5 million unmanned systems were built last year.
It is not the first time there has been news of children being used in Russia's war.
Last month, Georgetown University published that thousands of children abducted from Ukrainian villages were being forcibly turned into soldiers.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Mail
24 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Moment wounded Ukrainian soldier escapes Russian forces... on an e-bike that was delivered by drone
This is the astonishing moment a wounded Ukrainian soldier who was stranded for several days behind enemy lines was able to escape after he was delivered an e-bike by a drone. Footage captured by the Rubizh brigade of Ukraine 's national guard shows an unmanned aerial vehicle hauling the 88-pound bike down to the injured serviceman before he is seen cycling away from Russian forces. Three of the brigade's troops were reportedly killed by enemy fire during the operation in the Siversk area in northern Ukraine, which left the soldier to hold down the position on his own for five days. He also sustained a leg injury, making it difficult for him to evacuate alone. 'The enemy was in front, behind, and on both flanks. Completely surrounded,' Mykola Hrytsenko, a junior lieutenant serving as the brigade's chief of staff, said in a video published on Wednesday. The soldier said his team came up with an evacuation plan that involved heavy cargo drones to carry the bicycle to his position. These types of drones are usually used by Ukraine as bombers but can also lift heavy cargo. Hrytsenko said his comrades initially lost two drones trying to deliver the electric vehicles to him. The first was shot down as it attempted to deliver the bike, while the second crashed after its motors burned out. Mykola Gristenko, a chief of staff in the brigade, said a rescue team could not reach the injured soldier without risking their own lives. 'It was impossible to drive up with equipment because the enemy was everywhere. He couldn't get out on his own either, because he had to walk 1.5km to the nearest position. 'In his condition, with his injuries and lower limbs, he simply wouldn't have made it.' Drones have become an integral tool used by Ukraine during the war with Russia, allowing troops to navigate enemy lines without risking soldiers' lives. It comes after Ukraine unleashed chaos at Moscow's four airports last week with drone strikes on the city. Hundreds of passenger planes had to be diverted as waves of unmanned flying bombs converged on the Russian capital. Footage showed explosions as Russian air defences attacked incoming unmanned planes in Zelenograd, a district 23 miles northwest of the Kremlin. The soldier said his team came up with an evacuation plan that involved heavy cargo drones to carry the bicycle to his position Russia's defence ministry claimed to have downed 93 Ukrainian drones overnight, including 19 that were approaching Moscow. But during the chaos, authorities were twice forced close airspace over Moscow. Russia's Federal Air Transport Agency diverted some 134 planes to alternate airports amid the mayhem, saying it was 'necessary to ensure the safety of civil aircraft flights'. Frustrated passengers - including tourists on summer vacations - were hit by delays, diverted flights and numerous cancellations in an apparent new tactic by Ukraine to paralyse air travel in Vladimir Putin's capital. Many bedded down at the airports amid the chaos as airports Sheremetyevo, Domodedovo, Vnukovo and Zhukovsky were all affected.


The Guardian
26 minutes ago
- The Guardian
Ukraine war briefing: Zelenskyy calls for ‘regime change' in Russia after attack on Kyiv kills 16
Volodymyr Zelenskyy has urged his allies to bring about 'regime change' in Russia, hours after a Russian drone and missile attack on Kyiv killed 16 people including two children. The Ukrainian president said he believed Russia could be 'pushed' to stop the war. 'But if the world doesn't aim to change the regime in Russia, that means even after the war ends, Moscow will still try to destabilise neighbouring countries,' he said on Thursday, speaking virtually to a conference marking the 50th anniversary of the cold war-era Helsinki accords. Russia's overnight strikes wounded at least 150 people, authorities said. Russia fired more than 300 drones and eight cruise missiles at Ukraine – with Kyiv the main target – from late Wednesday to early Thursday, the Ukrainian air force said. One missile tore through a nine-storey residential building in the capital's west, ripping off its facade, authorities said. Zelenskyy said the injured including 16 children and six police officers. It was the largest number of children hurt in a single attack on Kyiv during the war, the rescue service said. Donald Trump criticised Russia's actions in Ukraine, suggesting new sanctions against Moscow were coming. 'Russia – I think it's disgusting what they're doing,' the US president said on Thursday. 'We're going to put sanctions,' he said, before adding: 'I don't know that sanctions bother him,' referring to Russian president Vladimir Putin. Russia's attack came just days after Trump issued a 10-to-12-day ultimatum for Moscow to halt its invasion or face sanctions. The Ukrainian parliament has passed a law restoring independence to two anti-corruption bodies, essentially annulling another law adopted last week that prompted the biggest street protests since Russia's full-scale invasion three years ago, reports Shaun Walker. Several hundred protesters outside the parliament building in Kyiv erupted into chants of 'the people are the power' as the bill passed on Thursday. Volodymyr Zelenskyy will hope the new law will put an end to what had threatened to become a political crisis domestically and had worried European allies. He signed the law into force swiftly after the vote. Russia claimed on Thursday that it had captured the Ukrainian town of Chasiv Yar, a strategically important military hub in the eastern Donetsk region. Zelenskyy called Moscow's claim 'Russian disinformation', saying: 'Ukrainian units are defending our positions.' Ukrainian military analyst Oleksandr Kovalenko said Russian forces 'have full control over the entire northern and eastern part' of Chasiv Yar, including districts that had been hardest to get. But he said fighting for the western side was ongoing, with the situation 'very difficult'. The battlefields reports could not be independently verified.


Reuters
3 hours ago
- Reuters
Trump says it is 'disgusting' what Russia doing to Ukraine
WASHINGTON, July 31 (Reuters) - U.S. President Donald Trump on Thursday sharply criticized Russia's "disgusting" behavior against Ukraine and said he plans to impose sanctions on Moscow if no agreement can be reached. Trump, speaking to reporters in the Oval Office, said he was not sure whether sanctions would deter Russia. He has given Russian President Vladimir Putin until August 8 to make a deal or else he will respond with economic pressure.