When 23-year-old Aishat Baimuradova fled her home last year, she believed she finally had a chance to live the way she wanted.
Coming from Chechnya, a conservative Muslim republic in Russia, she cut her hair short, stopped covering her head, shaved off part of her eyebrow and posted quirky selfies on Instagram.
She told her new friends she could finally breathe.
In October, Aishat was found dead in a rented flat in neighbouring Armenia. Police say she was murdered.
Two people were seen leaving the building where she was found, including a woman Aishat had befriended not long before her death. Both reportedly left for Russia soon afterwards.
Russians do not need a passport to enter Armenia; their internal ID is enough. That also makes it an easy route for anyone trying to flee.
Chechnya, in Russia's North Caucasus, is often described by rights groups as a state within a state - a place where power is highly personalised and loyalty to long-standing leader Ramzan Kadyrov often overrides laws and formal institutions.
For years, human rights organisations have documented enforced disappearances, torture and extrajudicial killings in the republic, as well as systematic persecution of those who dissent.
Chechen officials have consistently denied these allegations, claiming they are fabrications aimed at discrediting the region.
Several high-profile critics of Chechen authorities have been killed abroad, and Aishat Baimuradova is the first known Chechen woman to have died in suspicious circumstances after fleeing Russia.
Her family tried to persuade her to come back, but when nothing came of it they disowned her, according to SK SOS, the crisis group that helped her leave.
The night of Aishat's death, she was with a woman she met online, reported to be of Chechen origin. The investigation into her murder continues, highlighting the ongoing dangers faced by those escaping repression in Chechnya.


















