Following the
24 February 2022 full-scale Russian invasion of Ukraine, Isakova and some other
anti-war protestors in Sochi who had avoided arrest in a protest in March in Sochi chose to print flyers with
QR codes that led to an online text "Time to change!" written by Isakova, criticising
Vladimir Putin as a dictator and calling for citizens to organise and carry out
nonviolent resistance against the Putin government. On 17 April 2022, Isakova and her colleagues distributed the flyers. Isakova was detained and interrogated for six hours. She was interrogated again the following day. Following her arrest, Isakova spoke with her father, who described her as a "traitor to [their] family, an enemy of the people, and a criminal". Isakova was not prosecuted. Her father visited her "to tell [her] that [she] was no longer his daughter," according to Isakova. Isakova left Russia on 19 August 2022. Isakova was interviewed by
BBC News. She described disagreements with her father on
LGBT rights in Russia and the 2022 Russian full-scale invasion of Ukraine that led her to feel "a very big explosion of empathy". On 19 August, Eduard Isakov again described Isakova as a "traitor" and stated that he had cut off communication with her. ==Activist project==