Bali Ukrainian Murder Case: Victim Was Tracked for Weeks Before Abduction, Police Say

Bali Police Chief Inspector General Daniel Adityajaya provided the latest updates on the kidnapping and murder of Ukrainian foreigner Ihor Komarav, also known as IK, 28, at Bali Police Headquarters on Monday (March 30). Photo: Bali Police Public Relations.

Bali Police Chief Inspector General Daniel Adityajaya provided the latest updates on the kidnapping and murder of Ukrainian foreigner Ihor Komarav, also known as IK, 28, at Bali Police Headquarters on Monday (March 30). Photo: Bali Police Public Relations.

BADUNG, Bali — What initially appeared to be a brutal but isolated crime is now emerging as something far more calculated.

Police in Bali say a Ukrainian national who was later found dismembered had been under surveillance for nearly a month before he was abducted—an indication, investigators believe, that the crime was carefully planned rather than spontaneous.

The case, which has drawn international attention, is now being reconstructed not just as an act of violence, but as a sequence of deliberate steps carried out across multiple locations.

A Pattern of Surveillance

According to Bali Police, the victim was monitored repeatedly in the weeks leading up to the abduction.

Investigators say surveillance activity began in late January, with individuals observed near the victim’s accommodation on several dates. CCTV footage captured multiple visits—sometimes up to four times a day—by different individuals, suggesting a coordinated effort rather than isolated observation.

“They studied the victim over time,” said I Gede Adhi Mulyawarman, director of general crimes at Bali Police. “There were shifts, different people at different times, all monitoring the same target.”

The surveillance was not limited to people. Authorities also identified a pattern in the use of vehicles, particularly motorbikes that were rotated among suspects.

One of those vehicles—a Yamaha XMAX—was repeatedly used to follow the victim. Police say it had been rented through a chain involving multiple individuals, including a Nigerian national who has already been detained.

Photo of Ukrainian citizen who was the victim of kidnapping and murder in Bali (IST)

The Day of the Abduction

The operation, police believe, reached its peak in mid-February.

On the day of the incident, investigators say the victim was intercepted in the Jimbaran area, in Bali’s south. Witness accounts and evidence suggest that several individuals were involved in stopping and taking the victim in what authorities describe as a coordinated ambush.

“It was not random,” Adhi said. “There was preparation, positioning, and execution.”

From that point, the victim was transported between locations.

A Chain of Locations

The investigation has identified multiple sites linked to the crime.

After the abduction, the victim was first taken to a villa in Tabanan. Blood traces found there were later confirmed through DNA analysis to match the victim.

He was then moved again—this time to a villa in Gianyar, which police now suspect to be the primary location where the killing took place. The conclusion is supported by forensic analysis, GPS tracking data, and additional blood evidence.

Authorities have emphasized that the crime unfolded across several locations, each playing a distinct role.

“This was not a single crime scene,” Adhi said. “There were movements, transitions, and actions at different points.”

Police put up police tape at Ketewel Beach, Sukawati District, Gianyar Regency, Bali, Thursday (February 26, 2026). ANTARA/HO-Gianyar Police Public Relations

The Final Stage

Days later, investigators received reports of suspicious activity—individuals seen transporting large packages in a separate location.

That site has since been designated as another crime scene, believed to be linked to efforts to dispose of evidence.

Shortly after, human remains were discovered at the Wos Teben River estuary in Ketewel, Gianyar.

DNA testing later confirmed the remains belonged to the missing Ukrainian national.

A Case Still Expanding

Police are continuing to map the full sequence of events, including the role of each suspect and each location.

Several suspects remain at large and are believed to have fled Indonesia, adding an international dimension to the investigation.

For Bali, a destination known for tourism rather than violent crime, the case stands out—not only for its severity, but for the level of coordination it appears to involve.

What It Reveals

The investigation is still ongoing, but one conclusion is already clear: this was not a crime of opportunity.

It was a process.

Surveillance. Movement. Execution. Disposal.

Each stage, police say, appears to have been planned.

And as investigators continue to follow the trail, the case is becoming less about a single act—and more about the system behind it.

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