For several years, Procházková concentrated on wars in Chechnya and was in Groznyi when it was bombed for the first time. In June 1995, during the hostage-taking raid at Budyonnovsk in southern Russia, she offered herself in exchange for hostages taken from the hospital. Procházková reported the horrors of both the first and second Chechen War, often to the dismay of Russian authorities. During that time, she started to organize relief efforts for families ravaged by war. In 2000 she limited her work as a journalist and dedicated herself to humanitarian work, establishing a shelter for orphans in Groznyi. Her critique of Russian politics in Chechnya brought punishment—in 2000 she was forbidden to stay in Russia for a period of several years (and returned there only in late 2011[1]).
After returning from Russia to the Czech Republic, Procházková founded a small humanitarian organisation Berkat which concentrates on aid mainly to Chechnya and Afghanistan. Adding to the list of volatile regions she has worked in, she began covering the situation in Afghanistan and was the last journalist to speak with Ahmed Shah Massoud before he was killed.
Procházková's second husband, Ibragim Zyazikov, an Ingushethian from the teip of Murat Zyazikov who worked as security guard for the People in Need organization, was kidnapped in Chechnya in February 2003 and disappeared without trace.[2] In 2006, her son Zafar (named after her third husband, Zafar Paikar, a photographer from Afghanistan) was born.[3]
Petra Procházková, Jaromír Štětina: Utřete tělesné šťávy (Wipe out the body fluids), 2001, ISBN80-86103-51-X. Collection of short stories about people pushed outside the society due to wartime cruelty.
Jaromír Štětina, Petra Procházková: Rošangol, 2003, ISBN80-86103-70-6. Two stories about women-mothers from the contemporary Afghanistan.
Petra Procházková: Aluminiová královna: rusko-čečenská válka očima žen (The Aluminium Queen: The Russian-Chechen War Through the Eyes of Women), 2003, ISBN80-7106-730-X. Document about women struggling for survival in Chechnya during the wars. It was translated into French, Swedish, Polish, Dutch and Estonian.
Petra Procházková: Frišta, 2004, ISBN80-7106-792-X. Novel about a Russian-Tadjik woman living in Afghanistan after the fall of Taliban.