The Russian woman found to live in Karnakaka Cave with children returns home

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A Russian, who made global titles, after being found to live in a cave in India with her two young daughters, she has been in her country, said a BBC employee.

Nina Kutina, 40 years old, and her daughters – six and five – were saved on July 9 by police officers at Ruinen Patrol in a forest in the southern state of Karnakaka.

A woman who had no valid staying documents in India was sent to a foreigners’ detention center with her daughters.

Last week, the Supreme Court in Karnakaka asked the federal government to issue documents to G -Ja Kutina and her daughters to return home.

They left for Russia on September 28, an employee of the Regional Registration Service of Foreigners (FRRO) who wanted to remain anonymous, BBC Hindi told. The insignificant son of D -Jia Kutina from another relationship, who was later found to live in the state of Goa, also went with them.

The Supreme Court had heard a petition filed by Shlomo Goldstein dror, an Israeli businessman living in Goa, who said he was the father of the two minor girls. He had asked the court to stop the children from being sent back to Russia and appealing for their custody.

G -n Goldstein has not yet commented on the court order. He has the opportunity to appeal this, but it is not clear whether a decision in his favor could force the children to be sent back to India.

G -n Goldstein had earlier told a television channel that Da Kutina had left Goa without informing him and that he had filed a complaint with the police. He also said he “provided their well -being (the woman and the two minor girls) for a long time.”

In the order, however, the court stated that despite the allegations of G -H Goldstein, Mom and the children “more inexplicable” were “found in an isolated cave”.

The court also stated that G -n Goldstein cannot explain why they live in the cave, “until they are found there and the authorities have begun (take) action for their rehabilitation.”

The police team, who found that the three said they were on the routine patrol near Ramtertha Hills in the Gokarna Forest, which borders on Goa’s tourist paradise when they noticed brightly colored clothes hanging near Cave.

As they approached – the entrance to the cave was taken with brightly colored sari – they saw a “little blond girl”, exhausted. When the shocked policemen followed her inside, they found a di Kutina and the other child.

The three had scarce possessions – plastic mats, clothes, packages with immediate noodles and some other food items – and the cave was running out.

Police told the BBC in July that they had a difficult time to convince the mother that it was dangerous to remain in the isolated place with snakes and wild animals in the forest. Police quote her for saying, “Animals and snakes are our friends. People are dangerous.”

Police said she had told them that they were living in the cave for a week when they were found. She also told the police that she had come to Karnataka from Goa, where she also claims to have lived in a cave. She said that her smallest daughter was born in the Goa cave.

D -Ja Kutina defended her lifestyle in video interviews with Indian news agency Annie, saying that she and her children are happy to live so and that “nature gives good health.”

However, police said they could not risk, as the area was prone to landslides during the monsoon season.

Du Kutina and her daughters were taken for a medical examination and then moved to a detention center.

G -H Goldstein’s lawyer, Beana PK, claims in court that deportation will not be in the interest of the children, citing India to have signed the Convention of the United Nations on the rights of the child and the provisions of the 2003 Children’s Children Act.

But federal government lawyer Aravind Kamat told the court that this case could not be described as a deportation “because D -Ja Kutina herself wrote at the Russian embassy, ​​expressing her desire to return to her home country.

The court documents show that the Russian Embassy offered G -Ja Kutina and the children an emergency trip window between September 26 and October 9.

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