She documentary reportedly includes internal documents and testimonies from people claiming to be involved, pointing to a large-scale cover-up. Her family remains under pressure. According to reports, they were not allowed to freely mourn: her aunt was later and the location of her grave is tightly controlled. Her mother and other family members continue to campaign for justice, reject the official explanations, and call for accountability. After Nika’s body was found, her family contested the official narrative.
While authorities claimed she died from falling, her family insists her injuries were consistent with blows from a hard object. Amnesty International reviewed her burial certificate, which cited “multiple injuries caused by collision with a hard object” as the cause of death. According to reports, when her body was returned to the family, the security presence was heavy, and her burial was tightly controlled: she was buried in Hayat-ol-Ghayb, a village about 40 km from her hometown, under controversial circumstances and without full family presence.

