In 1985, Baiev graduated from
medical school and started his specialist training. He returned to Chechnya in 1988 and became a successful
plastic surgeon; and, in the early 1990s, he went to
Moscow for additional training. He has said of his practice in Moscow: "In Moscow, 75% of my patients were people who wanted facelifts and tummy tucks, while 25% were accident victims. People came from abroad—Sweden, Germany, Switzerland—for plastic surgery because we were offering such operations at a tenth of the cost in their countries. I could have stayed in Moscow, but by 1994 it was clear that war was going to break out, and I decided it was my duty to help my fellow Chechens." His patients included the rebel leaders
Shamil Basayev and
Salman Raduyev. Both sides of the conflict saw Baiev's actions of treating the other side as
treason and multiple death threats were made against him. Consequently, the
human rights organization
Physicians for Human Rights sponsored Baiev for
political asylum in the
United States during the
Second Chechen War and Baiev flew to
Washington, DC, in April 2000. After his family joined him in the U.S. ten months later, Baiev and his family have been living in
Needham,
Massachusetts. ==Books==