&w=3840&q=100)
Meditation, snakes & instant noodles: How a Russian woman spent 8 years in Karnataka forests
Inside the cave, the 'spiritually inclined' Russian woman had kept a Rudra idol, Russian books, and photos of Hindu deities. Police found her during a routine patrol. Image courtesy: X
Most people go off-grid for a weekend. However, Nina Kutina stayed hidden in a cave, deep inside the forests of Karnataka, for nearly eight years.
Living with her two young daughters in a hillside cave near Gokarna, the 40-year-old Russian woman, who now goes by the name Mohi, spent her days meditating, drawing, and surviving on instant noodles. There was no electricity, no phone, and no contact with the outside world. Her daughters had never even seen a bed.
STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD
That quiet life came to light last week when local police, during a routine patrol, discovered the family's home deep inside the forest near Gokarna.
So, how did they end up there? And what happens next? Here's what we know.
'Snakes are our friends'
When local police stumbled upon a hidden cave in the treacherous Ramatirtha hills of Kumta taluk on Friday, they found Nina and her two young girls living quietly inside.
Inside, the 'spiritually inclined' Russian woman had kept a Rudra idol, Russian books, and photos of Hindu deities, reports The Indian Express.
While they said they had been in that particular cave for two months, police later learned it was part of an eight-year-long journey of living off-grid in India.
'We convinced her to come out, stating that there were chances of landslides in the area,' Gokarna police Sub Inspector Sridhar S R said, adding that when warned about snakes in the area, she replied that 'the snakes are our friends and they don't harm us unless we trouble them'.
She also shared that during their trips to nearby waterfalls to bathe, snakes would often pass by without showing any signs of aggression.
Sridhar told the Indian Express that he had found a lot of photos of Kutina and her kids in her phone. 'She had kept a schedule for kids which includes drawing, singing, chanting mantras, yoga and other exercises. Even on Sunday morning, she was teaching her kids yoga,' he said.
During the rainy season, the family lived with minimal clothing and relied mostly on daylight. Although they had candles, they rarely used them, the officer added.
STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD
According to Uttara Kannada Superintendent of police M Narayana, the family had been sleeping on plastic sheets and surviving mainly on instant noodles. Kutina had stocked up on enough groceries to get through the monsoon months.
'It's surprising how she and her children managed to survive in such conditions,' Narayana told Hindustan Times. 'Luckily, nothing happened to them during their time in the forest.'
How did police find the Russian woman?
The discovery happened by chance.
Local police were on a routine patrol in the Ramatirtha forest area following a recent landslide when they noticed pieces of cloth and plastic sheets near a hillside cave. Curious, they climbed up and were stunned to find a woman and two young children living in complete isolation.
'Our team saw sarees and other clothes hanging outside the cave to dry,' said Uttara Kannada SP M Narayana. 'When they went closer, they found Mohi (Nina Kutina) with her daughters.'
At first, Kutina claimed her passport and visa had been lost in the forest. But officers later recovered the documents from near the cave.
STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD
They learned she had arrived in India in 2016 on a business visa, which expired a year later. After connecting with spiritual communities in Goa and Gokarna, she chose not to return home. Instead, she began living off-grid—mostly in forests, caves, and remote areas—avoiding hotels and public spaces for fear of being discovered.
'She told us she loved meditating and doing pooja in the forest,' one officer told The Indian Express. 'She said the forest gave her peace.'
In 2018, she briefly visited Nepal before returning and settling again in the forests of Karnataka. During questioning, she shared that she had stayed in the same cave on two or three previous occasions, always seeking mental calm.
Her daughters—aged around six-and-a-half and four—were both born in India. Officials said they appeared physically healthy and mentally alert. However, Kutina refused to provide any details about her husband or the children's father, only saying she didn't wish to talk about him.
STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD
After persuading the trio to leave the cave, police arranged for them to spend the night at a nearby ashram run by an 80-year-old female Swamiji from the Shankara Prasad Foundation. Officers said the children were visibly excited to see electricity and sleep on proper beds—luxuries they had never experienced before.
What's next?
The following morning, Sub-Inspector Sridhar received a WhatsApp message from Kutina, written in Russian. In it, she expressed sadness over being separated from the forest.
'She wrote that she loved India, the forests, and meditation,' Sridhar said. 'She felt heartbroken and blamed us for taking her away from nature.'
Kutina and her daughters have now been placed in a women's shelter for their safety, while legal steps for their deportation have begun.
According to The Indian Express, lawyer Sahana Basavapatna, who has dealt with similar immigration cases, explained that deportations often stall due to funding issues. In most cases, neither the Indian government nor the person's home country pays for the return travel. Many end up stuck in detention centres until they can arrange the money themselves.
STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD
However, in rare cases involving nationals from countries considered security risks, the Indian government may fund the deportation to speed up the process.
Kutina's expired visa makes her an illegal immigrant, and since her children were born during her undocumented stay, they aren't eligible for Indian citizenship either.
Officials said that Kutina and her daughters will appear before the Foreigners Regional Registration Office (FRRO) in Bengaluru on July 14. A woman police officer will escort them during the proceedings.
'They will be handed over to FRRO officers for further action and to initiate contact with the Russian Embassy,' SP Narayana confirmed.
With input from agencies

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


Time of India
4 hours ago
- Time of India
2 women accuse Chhangur Baba of forced conversions
Lucknow: Two women from Bengaluru and UP's Auraiya have come forward with testimonies, alleging they were trapped, exploited, and forcibly converted to Islam as part of a religious conversion syndicate allegedly run by Jamaluddin alias Chhangur Baba. Both women, in their mid-20s, were rescued with help from Vishwa Hindu Raksha Parishad national president Gopal Rai. Rai has claimed getting threats. Speaking at a press conference in Lucknow on Monday, the women accused Baba's network of using fake Hindu identities, emotional manipulation, sexual abuse, and blackmail to coerce Hindu women into conversion and marriage. The Bengaluru-based victim, a beautician, said she was contacted on Instagram by a man posing as "Raju Rathore" (real name Faisal), who lured her to Dubai on the pretext of a job. There, she was allegedly gang-raped, filmed, and blackmailed. She was introduced to Chhangur Baba via video call and forced to convert. After returning to India, she was taken to Saharanpur, where she was allegedly assaulted again. The Auraiya victim said her mother sought help from a man named "Rudra" (real name Meraj) to treat her alcoholic father. Rudra introduced them to Chhangur Baba. The woman was forcibly married in a mosque after a video-call conversion and was held captive for three months. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like Giá vàng đang tăng mạnh trong năm 2025 — Các nhà giao dịch thông minh đã tham gia IC Markets Tìm hiểu thêm Undo She also alleged that she overheard conversations about plans to make India an Islamic nation. Despite approaching the police in Auraiya, no FIR was registered, she claimed. ATS officials said they will verify the women's statements and incorporate the allegations into their ongoing probe into Baba's activities. Meanwhile, the Balrampur district administration on Monday said they will recover Rs 8.55 lakh from Baba and his aides as compensation for the cost of demolishing illegal constructions on govt land in Madhpur village near Utraula. After failing to vacate the land despite a formal notice, the administration conducted a three-day demolition drive using eight bulldozers. Recovery notices are now being issued. "If the amount is not deposited, legal action will be taken," DM Pawan Agarwal said.


Hindustan Times
5 hours ago
- Hindustan Times
Martin Cruz Smith, acclaimed author of 'Gorky Park,' dies at 82
NEW YORK — Martin Cruz Smith, the best-selling mystery novelist who engaged readers for decades with 'Gorky Park' and other thrillers featuring Moscow investigator Arkady Renko, has died at age 82. Martin Cruz Smith, acclaimed author of 'Gorky Park,' dies at 82 Smith died Friday 'surrounded by those he loved,' according to his publisher, Simon & Schuster. Further details were not immediately available, but Smith revealed a decade ago that he had Parkinson's disease, and he gave the same condition to his protagonist. His 11th and final Renko book, 'Hotel Ukraine,' will be published this week. The Associated Press praised it as a 'gem' that 'upholds Smith's reputation as a great craftsman of modern detective fiction with his sharply drawn, complex characters and a compelling plot.' Among Smith's honors were being named a 'grand master' by the Mystery Writers of America, and winning the Hammett Prize for 'Havana Bay' and a Gold Dagger award for 'Gorky Park.' Born Martin William Smith in Reading, Pennsylvania, and a graduate of the University of Pennsylvania, where he studied creative writing, Smith started out as a journalist, including a brief stint at the . He had been a published novelist for more than a decade before he broke through in the early 1980s with 'Gorky Park." His book came out when the Soviet Union and the Cold War were still very much alive and centered on Renko's investigation into the murders of three people whose bodies were found in the Moscow park cited in the title. 'Gorky Park,' praised as a compelling and informative take on the inner workings of the Soviet Union, topped The New York Times' fiction bestseller list and was later made into a movie starring William Hurt. ″'Gorky Park' is a police procedural of uncommon excellence," Peter Andrews wrote in the Times in 1981. 'Martin Cruz Smith has managed to combine the gritty atmosphere of a Moscow police squad room with a story of detection as neatly done as any English manor-house puzzlement. I have no idea as to the accuracy of Mr. Smith's descriptions of Russian police operations. But they ring as true as crystal.' Smith's other books include science fiction , the Westerns 'North to Dakota' and 'Ride to Revenge,' and the 'Romano Grey' mystery series. Besides 'Martin Cruz Smith' — Cruz was his maternal grandmother's name — he also wrote under the pen names 'Nick Carter' and 'Simon Quinn.' Smith's Renko books were inspired in part by his own travels in the Soviet Union and he would trace the region's history over the past 40 years, whether the Soviet Union's collapse , war in Chechnya , or the rise of Russian oligarchs . The noted in its review of 'Hotel Ukraine' that Smith had devised a backstory pulled straight from recent headlines, referencing such world leaders as Volodymyr Zelenskyy of Ukraine,Vladimir Putin of Russia and former President Joe Biden of the U.S. This article was generated from an automated news agency feed without modifications to text.


India.com
5 hours ago
- India.com
Delivered two daughters in dangerous jungle, lived with snakes..., how did Russian woman survive in a cave in Karnataka?
New Delhi: Forty-year-old Russian woman Nina Kutina alias Mohi was heartbroken when she was taken out of the cave in which she had been living for the last two months along with her two daughters Preya (6) and Ama (4). Nina was recently rescued from a dangerous cave located in the Ramatirtha hills of Kumta taluk in Uttara Kannada district. Now she will be sent back to her country Russia. Who discovered the Russian woman and her daughters? The police had arrived in the forest during routine patrolling when they noticed some movement around the cave. There was a plastic sheet on the door of the cave and when the police went inside, they saw a little girl playing inside and Nina sleeping with her other daughter. The mother and daughters were rescued by Gokarna police sub-inspector Sridhar SR and his team. Sub-inspector Sridhar told The Indian Express that Nina first came to India in 2016 on a business visa and stayed in Goa. But soon she was drawn to Hinduism and took refuge in spirituality in the holy coastal town of Gokarna in Karnataka. Why did she stay in the forest? Nina's visa expired in April 2017, but she decided to stay here and chose to live in the forest instead of living in densely populated places to avoid immigration officials. For the last eight years, she has been living in the forests, away from people. In 2018, she got an exit permit, after which she went to Nepal for some time but then returned to India and started living in the dense forests of Uttara Kannada district of Karnataka. In the forest, she lived in complete isolation with her two daughters where there was no connection with the outside world and no modern facilities. The cave in which Nina was living for the last two months is covered with wild grass and there is a great danger of landslides here. What did the police find inside Nina's cave? The police said that a statue of Lord Shiva, Russian books and pictures of Hindu gods and goddesses were found inside the cave where Nina was staying. The police said that both of Nina's daughters were born in India, but when she was asked about the father of her daughters, she refused to tell anything about it. Officials are currently investigating whether Nina took any medical help during the delivery of her daughters while living in the forest. When the police asked Nina to leave the cave, she was not ready at all. When the police said that this forest is full of poisonous snakes and living there is not free from danger, Nina replied, 'Snakes are our friends and they do not harm us as long as we do not harm them. When we go to take a bath in the nearby waterfall, snakes keep roaming around us, they do not harm us.' Nina agreed to come out of the cave when she was told that there is a fear of landslides around the area. How did she and her daughters survive? The police said that even during the rainy season, Nina was living with her daughters with very few resources and had stored enough food items. She used to go to the nearby town with her daughters to buy things and charge the phone and then soon came back to the cave. Both of her daughters are very healthy and energetic and when they were brought to an ashram after rescue on Friday last week, they were very happy to see the lights, beds and other things. They had never lived in such an environment before.