This is the horrifying moment a BBC crew came under fire while following a group of local aid workers in Ukraine.
Footage shows the crew filming an aid drop in Mylove in the Kherson region when two missiles from the direction of the Russian front line explode nearby.
The video, which was recorded last month, then cuts to the panic-stricken cameramen charging into a vehicle and fleeing the scene.
It comes after Russia last week boasted of launching a revenge missile blitz against Ukraine which briefly plunged Kyiv into darkness and cut electricity to a nuclear power station.
The overnight blitz included six hypersonic missiles - the most the Kremlin has fired in one go.
At least nine civilians died as 81 missiles were aimed at targets across Ukraine, including Kharkiv in the north, Odesa in the south and Lviv in the west.
The barrage included 48 cruise missiles fired from submarines and warships in the Black Sea, the Sea of Azov and the Caspian Sea, as well as jets and long-range bombers which took off from Russia and neighbouring Belarus.
Russia also fired eight Iranian-made Shahed kamikaze drones, which officials suspect is a ploy to distract Ukraine’s air defences.
Ukraine said it shot down 34 of the 48 cruise missiles and four of the eight Iranian drones.
The attacks killed at least five people in a village outside Lviv, one in Dnipro while three civilians died in artillery shelling of the southern city of Kherson.
Vladimir Putin’s biggest barrage of missiles since mid-February was described as a "serious breach" of nuclear safety by EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell.
He said: "Zaporizhzhia is the biggest nuclear power plant in Europe and Russia is putting in danger the entirety of our joint European continent, Russia included."