Indian student allegedly fighting for Russia captured by Ukrainian forces

Authored by bbc.com and submitted by alicedean
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Indian student captured by Ukraine joined Russian army to avoid drug charges, says mother

20 hours ago Share Save Gopal Kateshiya BBC Gujarati, Morbi Share Save

Hasina Majoti Sahil Majothi had gone to Russia to study computer engineering

Ukraine has captured an Indian national allegedly fighting for Russian forces, the first known Indian detained in the ongoing war. Sahil Majothi, 22, from the Indian state of Gujarat, went to Russia to study computer engineering two years ago. His mother claims he was falsely accused in a drug case last April. Mr Majothi joined the Russian army to avoid imprisonment over drug charges, according to a video released by Ukraine's army on Tuesday. The Indian foreign ministry says it is investigating the case and has not received formal communication from Ukraine. The BBC has asked the Russian government for a response.

In an interview with BBC Gujarati, Mr Majothi's mother Hasina Majothi said her son went to Russia in January 2024. He completed a three-month language course in St Petersburg before moving to Moscow for college, supporting himself part-time as a kitchenware courier. She alleges that in April 2024, someone slipped drugs into a parcel handed to Mr Majothi during his deliveries. "The police caught him with it and charged him," Ms Hasina said. According to Ms Hasina, her son was detained, held for six months and later sentenced to seven years in prison. The family hired a private lawyer in Russia to defend him, but they had no idea when or how he was drafted into the military. "I don't know how he ended up in Ukraine. I only found out through the viral video," Ms Hasina said. In the video released by the 63rd Mechanized Brigade of the Ukrainian army, Mr Majothi can be heard saying he was given a choice between joining the Russian army, with pay for his service, or serving jail time. He said he was told he would serve in the military for a year before being released. Mr Majothi claims that different people promised him varying amounts of money - from a hundred thousand to over a million roubles - but he never received any payment. He says he underwent 15 days of training in September 2024 and was sent to the battlefield a year later, on 30 September. The next day, on 1 October, Mr Majothi said he had an altercation with his commander, after which he separated from Russian soldiers. That was when he came across a Ukrainian dugout and asked them for help, he added. The BBC cannot independently verify the date or location of the video in which he makes these claims.

Ukrainian army/Facebook Mr Majothi says he underwent 15 days of training before being sent to the battlefield a year later

Apollo_Justice_20 on October 12nd, 2025 at 17:19 UTC »

Forget reading the article, some people in here didn't even read the top comment before spouting shit.

mylifeforthehorde on October 12nd, 2025 at 12:51 UTC »

No he didn’t go there to fight. He went to there a To study a while back and then got trumped up on false charges and sent off to thr front .

The Ukrainians were decent / forgiving enough to understand he wasn’t out to kill em and seem to treating him ok.

Physical_Rest3254 on October 12nd, 2025 at 11:14 UTC »

The racists made it to the comments so fast, anything that lets them feel that they’re better than someone else lol.

He clearly said that he was falsely charged with drug possession, sentenced to 20 years in prison then got an option to join the army instead.

“Sahil Majothi, 22, from the Indian state of Gujarat, went to Russia to study computer engineering two years ago. His mother claims he was falsely accused in a drug case last April. Mr Majothi joined the Russian army to avoid imprisonment over drug charges, according to a video released by Ukraine's army on Tuesday.”

The second he could, he surrendered. Watch his interview before spewing your hatred. Absolute weirdos.