Indian authorities have detained seven foreign nationals accused of crossing into Myanmar to train armed groups, in a case that underscores the volatile security situation along the country’s eastern frontier. According to All India Radio, the group includes six Ukrainians and one American. They were remanded in custody by a New Delhi court on Monday for 11 days of interrogation. Investigators allege the men entered Mizoram state without permits before slipping across the border into Myanmar, where they are suspected of working with ethnic militias linked to insurgent movements inside India. The arrests come against the backdrop of Myanmar’s ongoing civil war, triggered by the military coup in 2021. Pro-democracy fighters and ethnic armed organisations now control swathes of territory, raising concerns in India about instability spilling across the porous border. Officials claim the suspects also brought in a large shipment of drones from Europe, intended for use in Myanmar. The National Investigation Agency later detained the Ukrainians in Delhi and Lucknow, and the American in Kolkata. They face charges of conspiring to commit terrorist acts against the Indian state, which carries a maximum sentence of life imprisonment. Diplomatic ripples are already evident. Ukraine’s foreign ministry confirmed its citizens were detained on 13 March and has requested consular access, stressing that no evidence has yet been presented of their involvement in illegal activity. The US embassy in New Delhi acknowledged awareness of the case but declined comment, citing privacy rules. The border region has long been a flashpoint. Mizoram’s chief minister claimed last year that Western mercenaries were passing through the state en route to Myanmar, though such assertions remain difficult to verify. India is now pressing ahead with construction of a 1,643km fence along its rugged frontier, as thousands of refugees from Myanmar’s Chin state continue to seek shelter across the divide. For New Delhi, the case highlights both the international dimensions of Myanmar’s conflict and the delicate balance India must strike between border security and humanitarian pressures. The coming days of interrogation may reveal whether the allegations of foreign involvement in rebel training are substantiated—or whether this is another episode in the murky theatre of regional insurgency. -2026-03-18