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BBC Hindi, Bengaluru
Police in India tries to gather a story about a Russian woman who lived in a cave in the southern state of Karnatak with their two young daughters.
Nina Kutin was rescued on July 9 by police officers who were in the usual patrol near the hills of Ramtece in the forest of Gocarno, bordering the tourist paradise of Goa.
Authorities say 40 -year -olds and her daughters – six and five years old – have no real documents to stay in India. They were placed in a detention center for foreigners near Bengalur, the state capital, and will be deported soon.
The Kutin defended her lifestyle in two videos of the Indian news agency Ani, saying that she and her children were happy in the cave and that “nature gives good health”.
But even a week after they were found, there is very little clarity in the way the woman and her children ended up in the forest, infected with snakes and wild animals; How long they lived there and who they really were.
“The area is popular with tourists, especially foreigners. But it has a lot of snakes, and it is prone to landslides, especially during the rainy season. To ensure the safety of tourists, we started patrolling forests last year,” BBK said.
The second policeman, who could not be called and entered the patrol party that came across a cave housing, said they were walking on a steep hill to investigate when they saw bright clothes that were dried outdoors.
As they approached the cave, the porch, to which it was shown with brightly colored sarai – “Little blond ran out”. When the shocked police followed her, they found Nina Kutin and the other child.
Their possessions were scanty – plastic rugs, clothing, packages of instant noodles and some other grocery objects – and the cave was leaked.
The video shot by police in the habitat of the cave seen by the BBC shows children dressed in multi -colored Indian clothes, smiling into the camera.
“The woman and her children were quite comfortable in this place,” said Mr. Naraj. “It took us some time to convince her that it was dangerous,” he added.
Police said that when they told her that the cave was dangerous because of the presence of snakes and wild animals in the forest, she said to them, “Animals and snakes are our friends. People are dangerous.”
The cuttings and her daughters were taken to the hospital for examination after rescue and received certification so that they are medical.
Official at the Indian Regional Registration Service (FRRA) said it is Russian and that it would be repatriate after the formalities are completed.
He says they appealed to the Russian Consulate in Chennai – BBC also wrote at the Russian Embassy in Delhi, but they are not yet responsible.
In the video interview with Indian information agencies Ani and PTI, Kutin said she was born in Russia, but did not live there for 15 years and traveled to “Many countries, Costa -Ryki, Malaysia, Bali, Thailand, Nepal, Ukraine.”
In her interviews with both agencies, Kututa stated that she had four children between the ages of 20 and 5. She told about the eldest – “My Big Son” who died in the road accident in Goa last year.
Officials say her second son is 11-year-old and is in Russia- and that they shared information with the consulate.
On Tuesday night, Frro said they found the girls’ father – Dror Goldstein – and that he was an Israeli businessman. They said that India was in India at that moment, and they met with him and tried to convince him to pay for the corner and repatriation her daughters.
Wednesday, said Goldstein Indian channel NDTV What the Cook left Goa without informing him and that he had filed a missing complaint with the police.
He said he wants joint guardianship on his daughters and would do his best so that the government does not send them to Russia.
There is no clarity as and when the Cutter and her daughters reached the forest in Karnatak.
Police said she told them they live in the cave for a week. They added that a week ago, she bought vegetables and foods, including the popular brand noodles.
They said she told them she had arrived in Karnatak from Goa, where she also claimed she lived in the cave. She also said that one of her daughters was born in the Goa cave.
In her PTI interview on Wednesday, she complained about the detention center, where she was filed with her daughters, who say “it’s like in prison.”
“We lived in a very good place. But now we can’t be alone. We can’t go outside. It’s very dirty here, and food is not enough,” she added.
It is unclear when and how the cutter came to India.
Police say she told them that she had lost her passport, but they were able to find a senior passport among her things that she had come to India for a business visit, which operated from October 18, 2016 to April 17, 2017.
But she overcame, was caught in a year, and the Goa Frro’s office issued her a “exit” to leave India. According to immigration stamps in the passport, it entered Nepal on April 19, 2018 and came out in three months.
It is unclear where she went after that, but the Cutty said that she “traveled at least 20 countries” – at least four of them after leaving India in 2018. ”
It is also unclear when she returned to India next, although some reports say she has returned since February 2020. She said PTI that she came back because “we really love India.”
The Kutin admitted that her visa ended a few months ago. “We do not have our visa, a real visa, our visa is over,” she said, adding that she had the gap because she grieved for her dead son and could not come up with anything else.
After the idol of the ramps welcomed, the form of the Hindu god Krishna, it was found in her habitation of the cave, it was reported that she went there to take meditation and for spiritual reasons.
But in her interview Ani she rejected the story. “It’s not about spiritually. We just love nature because it gives us health … It is a very great health, it’s not the way you live in the house.”
She added that she had a “great experience to stay in the natural, in the jungle” and insisted that her daughters were happy and healthy. The cave she chose was “very big and beautiful”, and she was “very close to the village” so she could buy food and other necessary.
“We did not die, and I did not bring my children, daughters to die in the jungle. They were very happy, they swam in the waterfall, they had a very good place for sleep, a lot of lessons in making art, we did the clay, we painted, we ate well, I was cooking very good and delicious food,” she said.
The Kutin also rejected the proposals that life in the forest had been hazard by her children.
“We lived there all the time, yes, we saw a few snakes,” she said, but added that it was like people who report the search for snakes in their homes, kitchens or toilets.