Is Igor Komarov Dead? Mob Boss's Son Admits 'Stealing £8m' In Chilling Bali Ransom Video
Indonesian police probe the disappearance of Igor Komarov, a Ukrainian tourist, amid ransom demands and dismembered remains.

Indonesian police are testing whether dismembered body parts found near a Bali beach belong to missing Ukrainian tourist Igor Komarov, 28, who was allegedly kidnapped in Jimbaran earlier this month and forced to record a chilling ransom video admitting he had 'stolen' £8 million, according to investigators.
The news came after Bali police named seven foreign nationals as suspects in the Igor Komarov case and revealed they were running parallel investigations into the abduction and the discovery of mutilated remains on the island. Officers have stressed that they have not confirmed whether Komarov is dead or alive, and that only DNA analysis can link the body parts to the Ukrainian, so any claims about his fate should, for now, be treated with a grain of salt.
Ransom Video Shows Igor Komarov Begging Over 'Stolen' Millions
Komarov was reported missing after what police describe as a roadside ambush. He was riding a motorcycle in the Jimbaran area of south Bali when a group of men allegedly forced him off the road and abducted him. A friend travelling with him, named in reports as Yermak Petrovsky, managed to escape and raise the alarm.
Dismembered remains found in Bali — possible link to abduction of Ihor Komarov
— NEXTA (@nexta_tv) February 27, 2026
Human remains have been discovered on a beach in the Gianyar district of Bali. According to preliminary information, death occurred around three days ago.
The case is being examined for a possible… pic.twitter.com/7pepWx2UFF
Soon afterwards, a graphic and unverified video began circulating online. It shows a badly beaten man, believed by friends to be Igor Komarov, addressing his parents and pleading for money. In the clip, he claims to have broken limbs and severed fingers and says that he and others 'stole those USD 10 million,' roughly £8 million, before begging for the money to be returned.
Additional short videos, also unverified, appear to show the same man admitting involvement in a bank‑account scamming operation. Indonesian investigators are now working on the assumption that the kidnapping may be linked to financial disputes, with the ransom video doubling as a forced confession.
Police have not released the footage in full, and there has been no independent forensic verification of when or where it was recorded. Officers say they believe Komarov was filmed in a villa in Tabanan regency, west of Denpasar, but that assessment is based on their own tracking of the suspects rather than publicly available evidence.
Social Media Trail And Alleged Mob Connections Around Igor Komarov
Reports in Ukrainian and regional media have identified Komarov as the son of Oleksandr 'Narik' Petrovsky, a reputed organised crime figure. Indonesian police have not commented on those alleged mob links in their official briefings, but they are clearly treating the case as more than a routine tourist crime.
One line of inquiry, according to local coverage, is whether Komarov was targeted after his movements were exposed on social media. His girlfriend, influencer Yeva Mishalova, has around 146,000 followers and was posting about their Bali holiday at the time of the abduction.
Investigators are examining whether kidnappers could have used those posts to track the couple in real time. That theory remains unproven and relies heavily on timing and location tags rather than hard digital forensics, but it has already fed a wider debate about how much information high‑profile travellers share online.
Seven Foreign Suspects And A Bloodstained Villa
Bali Police spokesperson Senior Commissioner Ariasandy set out the bare bones of the criminal probe in Denpasar. Officers say the first breakthrough came when they detained a foreign man identified only as CH, who allegedly tried to leave Bali using a false passport and rented vehicles.
'Initially, we secured one foreign national with the initials CH, who rented vehicles using a false passport,' Ariasandy said. 'Following further investigation, we named six other foreign nationals as suspects — RM, BK, AS, VN, SM and DH. All are men.'
All seven are described as foreign nationals, but police have not publicly disclosed their citizenships. After tracing the rented vehicles seen on CCTV, officers raided a villa in Tabanan. There, forensic teams found bloodstains inside the property and in at least one of the vehicles linked to the suspects.
Investigators believe that the main ransom video featuring Igor Komarov was recorded inside that villa. They have not said whether any weapons or restraints were found, nor whether neighbours reported suspicious activity. No formal charges have been announced so far, only the suspects' status as alleged participants in a kidnapping plot.
BREAKING: Igor Komarov, son of a major mafia boss from Dnipro, Ukraine nicknamed “Narik”, has been kidnapped in Bali.
— Scott 🇺🇸 (@RandomHeroWX) February 21, 2026
The kidnappers sent a video, which stated clearly: no mafia contacts or police can help. They demand $10,000,000. Money they say was stolen from them, by… pic.twitter.com/0FqQ2nGIBj
Dismembered Remains And The Question: Is Igor Komarov Dead?
Separately, human body parts were discovered near the Wos River estuary on Bali. Local media describe them as badly mutilated and in an advanced state of decomposition. Forensic experts estimate that the person had been dead for more than three days when the remains were found.
Police immediately flagged a possible link to the Komarov investigation but moved quickly to dampen speculation. Senior Commissioner Ariasandy said there was a 'possibility' the remains were those of the missing Ukrainian, yet insisted that only DNA testing could confirm identity.
Samples have been taken from Komarov's mother for comparison. Until that analysis is complete, officers say they will not state publicly whether the remains belong to him. That restraint has not stopped rumours from spreading online that Igor Komarov has been killed, but at this point those claims are not backed by official confirmation.
The two strands of the inquiry — the kidnapping and the discovery of body parts — are being handled side by side. Police say both remain active, with no final conclusion reached about how they intersect. What is clear from the official statements is that Bali's investigators are now dealing with an unusually brutal case involving foreign suspects, alleged cross‑border fraud and a missing man whose last known words, on video, were to admit a multi‑million‑dollar theft and beg his parents to pay.
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