In a devastating, tear-soaked revelation that has left the world reeling, Yeva Mishalova (also known as Yesa or Eva), the glamorous Ukrainian influencer and devoted girlfriend of murdered tourist Igor Komarov, has broken her silence with a heartbreaking admission: the couple was secretly planning their winter wedding and dreaming of starting a family—only for the paradise getaway in Bali to end in unimaginable horror. Clutching a framed photo of the two of them on a sun-drenched boat, Yeva wept openly as she spoke of the future they had mapped out together, now cruelly stolen by kidnappers who tortured and dismembered her lover before his body parts washed ashore.

“We were planning for a wedding this winter,” she said through sobs in an emotional interview shared across social media and local outlets. “Igor proposed in whispers during our Valentine’s Day sunset… we talked about rings, vows, a quiet ceremony back home, and then a baby. Our little one was already on the way—he never even knew.” The pregnancy, confirmed in the chaotic days following Igor’s disappearance, adds a layer of profound tragedy: an unborn child destined to grow up hearing stories of a father whose life was brutally cut short in a failed $10 million ransom plot tied to shadowy underworld debts.

The romance had seemed picture-perfect. Igor, 28, the charismatic son of a wealthy Ukrainian businessman with rumored ties to Dnipro’s criminal networks, whisked Yeva away to Bali for what was meant to be an unforgettable escape. With nearly 200,000 followers on Instagram, Yeva documented every moment: steamy boat rides in barely-there bikinis, bouquets of pink roses on Valentine’s Day (February 14), geotagged locations glowing like beacons. “F—k 14 February, love you every day,” one caption read, the couple embracing against turquoise waves. Those public posts, investigators now believe, may have inadvertently handed kidnappers his exact whereabouts—no espionage required, just a scroll through her feed.

Mystery deepens over 'kidnapped' tourist in Bali after 'chilling ransom  vid' as one suspect is arrested & six more flee

The nightmare struck the very next day, February 15, in the bustling resort area of Jimbaran. Igor was riding a scooter with a friend when a convoy of vehicles ambushed them in a swift, professional hit. Masked assailants dragged him into a car and vanished, leaving his companion to raise the alarm. What followed was pure terror: multiple leaked videos showed a battered Igor—face swollen, eyes blackened, fingers severed from one hand—pleading in slurred desperation: “Mom, Dad, return the ten million… they need it back… I’m dying here.” Under duress, possibly drugged and tortured in a luxury villa in Tabanan Regency, he confessed to family-linked scams and begged for the ransom that never came.

By late February, the ocean betrayed the killers. Decomposing remains—a severed head, limbs, torso fragments, thighs, internal organs—washed up at the mouth of the Wos River near Ketewel Beach in Gianyar Regency, miles from the crime scenes. Bali police sealed the area, rushed samples to Jakarta’s forensic lab, and by early March confirmed the worst: 98% DNA match to Igor’s mother. Spokesperson Kombes Aria Sandy held a grim press conference in Denpasar, displaying documents with the victim’s name and birthdate: the mutilated body was Igor’s. Death likely occurred days earlier—decapitation and dismemberment as a final, savage warning.

The motive? Revenge in the criminal underworld. Igor’s father, allegedly a prominent figure in extortion and scam operations, may have crossed powerful rivals who dispatched enforcers—possibly including Chechen or Eastern European operatives—to settle the score on foreign soil. One Nigerian national was arrested for renting vehicles with fake papers; warrants issued for six others who fled Indonesia. Ukrainian authorities cooperate, but justice feels distant as suspects scatter.

Yeva’s grief is compounded by suspicion and speculation. Police questioned her amid whispers that her geotagged Valentine’s posts pinpointed Igor for the kidnappers. Online rumors swirl: was she complicit, an “inside woman” lured by payout? Or an unwitting poster girl whose innocent love notes became a deadly breadcrumb trail? She denies involvement fiercely, insisting the shares were pure romance. No charges filed, but the damage lingers—her feed went dark after the horror, only resurfacing with raw pain.

Now, the pregnancy revelation shatters hearts anew. Yeva says she discovered it amid frantic waiting for news, perhaps during sleepless nights hoping for a miracle. “Our baby was conceived in paradise,” she whispered, tears streaming. “I took the test alone, in shock. Igor would have been overjoyed… he talked about being a dad, teaching our child to swim, to love the sea like he did.” The child, due later this year, will inherit a legacy of violence, unanswered questions, and a mother’s fierce determination to honor Igor’s memory.

This case obliterates Bali’s idyllic image as the “Island of the Gods.” Tourists seek sun and serenity, but international crime syndicates have turned luxury villas into torture chambers and serene beaches into macabre dumping grounds. Police maintain the motive is criminal payback, not random violence, yet the $10 million ghost haunts: why no payment? Pride, fear, calculation?

For Yeva, the tears are endless. A wedding gown never worn, vows unspoken, a baby bump growing without its father’s touch. “He was my everything,” she said. “We had plans… so many plans.” As Bali’s waves erase footprints but not memories, one truth cuts deepest: in a world of shadows and ransoms, even the most romantic dreams can drown in blood—and an innocent child pays the eternal price.