A severed head found in Bali is believed to have belonged to the son of a wealthy Ukrainian businessman who was kidnapped and allegedly tortured, murdered and mutilated during a failed ransom attempt on the so-called ‘Island of the Gods.’
Ukrainian tourist Igor Komarov, 28, was attacked and kidnapped on February 15 while riding a scooter by a group of men in a convoy of vehicles in a military-style operation carried out in Jimbaran, a beachside district of Bali popular among Russian and Ukrainian nationals.
Komarov was traveling in Bali with his girlfriend, Yea Mishalova, a social media influencer with nearly 200,000 followers on Instagram.
Speculation has been made that a photo Mishalova shared of herself and Komarov on Valentine’s Day that reads “F**k 14 February, love you everyday” may have inadvertently revealed Komarov’s location to his abductors.
Komarov is the son of Oleksandr ‘Narik’ Petrovsky — a powerful and polarizing figure from Dnipro who has been mentioned in local media reports detailing his vast business influence, high-level political connections and alleged ties to the city’s criminal underworld.
Narik, as he is better known, has, however, never been convicted of a crime, and News.com.au does not allege that any of the Ukrainian reports about his alleged criminal activities are true.
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According to GPS tracking on one of the vehicles used in the kidnapping of his son, Komarov was taken to a luxury villa in Tabanan on Bali’s mid-west coast, where he was apparently beaten and tortured.
Grainy video footage first published on the Telegram channel MASH appeared to show Komarov with visible injuries, including two black eyes, pleading for his father to pay US $10 million to his abductors.
According to comments made by Komarov, apparently under duress, the abductors, suspected members of a Ukrainian crime syndicate family, staged the kidnapping to get back $10 million Petrovsky had stolen from them in a scam. The claim could not be verified by News.com.au.
“Mummy, Daddy, I beg you, help me please, you stole those ten million, which they ask for, return these ten million please,” Komarov said in the video that police in Bali are still attempting to verify the authenticity of.
“I will return everything to all those people from whom you have taken; they already chopped off some of my limbs, I have broken legs [and they] punched [my] rib cage. I’m already on meds, I already have no limbs,” Komarov said in Ukrainian, raising what appeared to be a bandaged and bloody stump of his left hand.
“An infection will start soon. I’m just dying, ” Komarov continued in a rambling, three-minute monologue. “I ask you very much, this is a very serious organization, please help me, no one can find me, neither mafiosos, no one, I was already taken to another country.
“Bring me home, what[ever] is left of me at the moment, please settle with these people, they need ten million dollars, which we stole. As soon as these ten million are received in their accounts, they will immediately let me go to the place where they took me. I beg you, please. Please settle. I’ll give you everything back, I’ll work for it, I will give you everything, please,” Komarov said, adding: “No gangsters will help you, no cops … Do not communicate with any other people.”
After identifying one of the vehicles, a rental car, used in the abduction, police tracked it to Tabanan. The villa was empty, though police did find a mobile phone and a bag belonging to the victim, along with traces of blood that forensic experts later matched to stains discovered inside the rental vehicle.
The story took a disturbing twist on February 27 when police announced they had discovered severed human body parts – a head, a right leg, upper chest sections, thighs and internal organs – at the mouth of the Wos River on Bali’s lower east coast, approximately 30 km from Tabanan.
Forensic analysis suggested the body parts came from a man who had died approximately three days before the grisly discovery, while emphasizing that the body parts have not yet been conclusively identified as belonging to Komarov using DNA testing.
“The DNA samples will be compared with those of family members who have reported a missing person or kidnapping, including the foreign national reported earlier,” said police spokesperson Senior Commissioner Ariasandy, who, like many Indonesians, goes by only one name. “We cannot speculate. All possibilities are being investigated, but conclusions must be based on scientific investigation and forensic results,” he said.
However, in another breaking development, the coroner in Bali told News.com.au on Sunday evening that they had made a partial match between Komarov’s distinct tattoos and the tattoos found on some of the body parts found in the river.
“I’m going to perform the autopsy tomorrow [Monday] morning but at this stage I can’t tell you anything [more] because I haven’t found any other significant findings other than the tattoo,” the coroner told News.com.au, adding that the tattoos “partially” match.
In a second announcement, the police spokesman said a foreign man who rented the vehicle had been arrested in connection with Komarov’s abduction and suspected murder. He said another six suspects, also foreign nationals, were wanted for questioning in connection with the crimes.
“Initially, we secured one foreign national with the initials CH, who rented vehicles using a false passport,” they said. “Following further investigation, we named six other foreign nationals as suspects — RM, BK, AS, VN, SM, and DH.” It is protocol in Indonesia not to mention the names of suspects until they have been officially charged with a crime.
The coroner added another finding that further increases the probability that the body parts belong to Komarov: “It’s impossible to identify the deceased due to advanced decomposition. However, based on the skull characteristic, I can say that he is Caucasian.”
Four of the suspects fled Bali through the international airport, while the other two are believed to still be hiding in Bali or another province in Indonesia. All six have been placed on Indonesia’s wanted persons list and Interpol’s Red Notice, a global request for law enforcement agencies to help locate and arrest fugitives.
According to Meyka, an AI-powered financial technology platform that helps investors analyze risk, Komarov’s abduction and suspected murder is shaping travel-security talk in Australia.
“The Bali kidnapping case can lift perceived risk among Australian travellers and families, even if overall conditions stay stable,” it said. “Airlines, agents, and insurers watch incident-driven sentiment closely. Short bursts of cancellations or policy queries can occur after high-profile news.”

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