Bhubaneswar, Dec 31: The Russian man, who had "disappeared" amid the mystery surrounding the deaths of two other men including a lawmaker from the same country in Odisha recently, was found on Saturday.

Andrew Glagolev, a self-proclaimed anti-Ukraine war activist, was located in a market area near Bhubaneswar railway station and he is now in the custody of the Government Railway Police (GRP), an official said.

His visa has expired and he had applied to the UN for asylum in India, Bhubaneswar GRP in-charge Jaydev Biswajit said.

The Russian MP was a critic of President Vladimir Putin while Glagolev, who used to stay in Puri, was also on the same page, having been sighted earlier on in Odisha's capital holding placards with anti-war and anti-Putin slogans, seeking financial assistance.

About a month ago, the man was seen in the Bhubaneswar railway station holding a placard that read: " I am Russian Refugee, I am against War, I am against Putin, I am Homeless, Please Help me".

The photo of the man holding that placard, clicked by some passenger, has gone viral after the death of his compatriots - lawmaker and businessman Pavel Antov and his fellow traveller Vladimir Bidenov in a hotel in Rayagada district.

"Today we detained him for the purpose of enquiry. His documents are being verified. Officers concerned are checking if he is authorised to stay in India. His visa has expired. A decision will be taken later on what to do with him," the GRP officer said.

Gleganov, who hails from Moscow, is in India since 2016.

"He has sought asylum in India through the UN in 2017. He has no source of income in India and asks for financial help from random people. He said he got more help from Indians than he had anticipated," Biswajit said.

When he was spotted at the railway station a month ago, the GRP had questioned him.

"The police had no cause to suspect any wrong-doing linked to his disappearance at that time, as the Rayagada incident happened thereafter," a senior railway police official told PTI.

The two deceased Russians were cremated and the CID is investigating their deaths.

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New Delhi, May 12 (PTI): Congress leader Shashi Tharoor on Monday described US President Donald Trump's announcement of halting military hostilities between India and Pakistan as "a politician wanting to take credit for something" and slammed the American leader for re-hyphenating the two South Asian countries.

Asserting that he did not like the social media post of Trump announcing the cessation of hostilities between India and Pakistan, Tharoor pointed out that the US president tried to make a "false equivalence" between India and Pakistan and said it was equating the victim with the perpetrator which was "shocking".

Asked about Trump's announcement, Tharoor told PTI Videos, "I see it as a particular politician wanting to take credit for something and I can see that the government of India probably said 'let them take the credit if they want to', but from our point of view we have made it clear that the peace followed a request from the DGMO of Pakistan who called his Indian counterpart at 3:35 pm (Saturday) and we did not take very long to say yes because we had never wanted a long war."

"We had made it very clear on May 7 that what we had done was to strike terrorist targets in reprisal for Pahalgam and the last thing that we wanted to see was the beginning of a long protracted conflict...We had said at every stage, we had done our thing, we have sent a message, if you react, we will react," the MP from Thiruvananthapuram said.

Clarifying that he was speaking as an individual MP, Tharoor said he did not like Trump's social media posts on the issue.

Tharoor said there were four problems with Trump's message including the "false equivalence" between India and Pakistan.

"You are making equivalent the victim and the perpetrator, which is really shocking. It is completely wrong to imply that as a result of this India is going to give some sort of negotiation to Pakistan. We will never negotiate to the point of a gun, we are never going to give the satisfaction to Pakistan of feeling that by unleashing a terrorist attack in Pahalgam they have somehow earned the right to negotiate with India," he said.

"I don't think that Mr Trump should have in any way, shape or form implied that the Kashmiri dispute has been internationalised by the American involvement. We don't even accept that there is a dispute of that nature, Kashmir is an integral part of India...we are not interested at all in internationalising the dispute," he said.

So the implication that the international community has a role to play in resolving this issue flies in the face of basic assumptions of India's foreign policy, Tharoor said.

"I do not believe we will do that. The fourth thing I did not like about Trump's tweet is that it re-hyphenated India and Pakistan," he said.

For the last 30 years, India has successfully in pursuade the world and US presidents since Clinton to not club the two countries together.

Tharoor also said the tension between India and Pakistan is not new.

"If we look back at the developments of the last decade, I think the last straw was the Pathankot attack...when the PM very graciously invited the Pakistanis to participate in the investigation into the attack. And they sent their intelligence people to an Indian airbase — something that had never happened before. They went back and said the Indians did it to themselves, that I think was the last straw.

"That’s when the prime minister felt, and the Government of India concluded, that you could never really trust the Pakistani military establishment and that entire apparatus there," he said.

"So if you look back at where things stood even before Pahalgam, it was not a very warm relationship. After Pahalgam, it’s taken a further dive — because, as you know, we’ve suspended the Indus Waters Treaty, we have reduced the number of personnel in the embassy here, in the High Commission, we have removed defence attaches," he said.

It is a very tense relationship even without a shooting war going on, Tharoor said.

"For three-four days we were shooting at each other which was a very serious matter which seems to have been brought to a halt right now. I hope it stays that way but even then peace in this case is just the absence of war," Tharoor said.

India and Pakistan have reached an understanding to stop all firings and military actions on land, air and sea with immediate effect after four days of cross-border strikes that triggered fears of a wider conflict.

In a short announcement, Foreign Secretary Vikram Misri said the directors general of military operations of the two countries agreed on the understanding during a call this afternoon.

The decision by India and Pakistan was first made public by Trump in a social media post while claiming that the talks between the two sides were mediated by the US.