Russian authorities say they have detained two Colombian men suspected of fighting for the Ukrainian military â a shocking twist in the weeks-long case of their disappearance since mid-July.
The last time Cielo ImbachĂ heard from her husband was more than 40 days ago, while he was on a layover in the Venezuelan capital Caracas. At the time, Jose Aron Medina was on his way back to Colombia after spending around nine months in Ukraine, she says.
He never made it home.
On Friday, Medina and his friend, fellow Colombian Alexander Ante, appeared in a video released by the Russian Federal Security Service, which accused them both of âparticipating in hostilities on the side of Ukraine against the Armed Forces of the Russian Federation as mercenaries.â
The Colombians were carrying âdocuments confirming their illegal activities,â said the FSB statement, and clothing with the insignia of the Ukrainian Carpathian Sich battalion.
State TV channel Russia 1 reported that Ante and Medina were in Venezuela when they were detained and extradited to Russia. Their detention in Moscow was ordered by the cityâs Lefortovsky District Court on August 28 and they are being held until October 22, the courtâs press service told state news agency TASS.
The two menâs detention and apparent extradition highlight the strong economic and military ties Russia has with Venezuela while also serving as a warning to foreign fighters, estimated to number in the thousands, who flocked to help Ukraine in the war effort.
In the meantime, ImbachĂ says she received no information from any of the countries involved.
âVenezuela just took them and deported them to Russia, and we donât understand the reason why they were deported,â she said.
âWe are desperateâ
ImbachĂ and Medina, 36, have a nine-year-old daughter and a son from her previous marriage. Both men, Medina and Ante, come from the western Colombian city of PopayĂĄn, and they live close to each other, she said.
ImbachĂ said her husband left for Ukraine last November, joining Ante who was already there. Medina decided to return home this July. She said he flew from Warsaw in Poland to Madrid, Spain, and then onwards to Venezuela. His destination was PopayĂĄn.
It remains unclear why the two men traveled through Venezuela, as there are several direct flight options between Spain and Colombia. Traveling through Venezuela is difficult due to sanctions imposed by the United States against the Latin American country.
ImbachĂ thinks her husband went via Caracas as it was the cheapest option. âFlights from Spain to Colombia are really expensive, while I think Venezuela was cheaper.â She does not know how they were planning to get from Caracas to PopayĂĄn.
A missing-person flyer from Colombiaâs attorney general, with photos of the two men, said that their last known location was a Venezuelan airport on July 18 where they were seen âwearing camouflaged clothing from the Ukrainian Army.â
ImbachĂ and Colombian congressman Jose Uscategui went to the Venezuelan embassy in Colombiaâs capital Bogota on July 26 to âmake a formal request for the safe return of these individuals to their home,â according to a tweet from Uscategui.
Venezuela has grown closer to Russia over the last several years as Nicolas Maduro seeks Russiaâs support to shore up his embattled presidency. The two countries have signed several bilateral agreements, including an extradition treaty.
