I checked LinkedIn and did a standard Google search, which brought up a couple of bearers from Malaysia:
https://www.linkedin.com/pub/dir?firstName=Nurzita&lastName=&trk=people-guest_people-search-bar_search-submithttps://www.instagram.com/nurzitaabdwahab/https://www.instagram.com/nurzitazolpkar/https://pharmacy.moh.gov.my/ms/direktori/nurzita-binti-ahmad-nasir.html
(Though in Malay "nur" is more frequently spelled as "nor", so the variant "Norzita" is more common over there:
https://www.linkedin.com/pub/dir?firstName=Norzita&lastName=&trk=people-guest_people-search-bar_search-submit)
Regardless, I agree that it doesn't sound like a Russian name. I have seen a few names that seem to be used in both Southeast Asia and Turkic-speaking countries, though -- it could be due to the fact that the Arabic "nur" element is commonly used in names in both of those regions.