Terrified residents, aid workers and BBC crew start running – No one killed in attacks according to Ukrainian authorities
The moment when workshop of BBC is forced to he runs away as he accepted fire from Russian missiles while reporting on aid workers in Ukraine.
Shocking video shows journalist Victoria Zhuhan kneeling near a wall with a man protecting her as a rocket exploded near Ukraine’s southern Kherson region.
Terrified residents and aid volunteers began to run when the first rocket hit with a loud bang.
Screams of fear accompanied the impact of the second missile, which landed even closer to the BBC team.
They jumped as a man shouted “go this way” in the direction of a black car. Two of them went in, but the man shouted again, “Move like this. Listen to me, move like this.’
Another man, likely the person filming the attack, replied: “I’ll go with this here,” as he ran towards the second car.
When she jumped into the car, she told the driver “I’m fine”, before a woman’s voice said over the radio: “I’m following, go, go, go.”
One who was also filming the aid, says in a video: “We are leaving. There was an artillery attack just now. It was so strong. I have never heard anything like it.’.
It was the first aid to reach the small village of Mylove in Kherson region in three weeks, and people were clearly desperate to get their hands on much-needed supplies.
No one was killed in the attacks according to Ukrainian authorities.
Source :Skai
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