Dramatic first-person footage of aid worker running from Putin’s drones

Dramatic first-person footage of aid worker running from Putin’s drones
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Dramatic first-person footage of aid worker running from Putin’s drones
Author: Josh Layton and Alina Kostrubitska
Published: Feb, 24 2025 16:10

A daring Ukrainian volunteer has shot first-person footage of himself rescuing civilians from the ‘horror’ of Vladimir Putin’s war machine. Denys Khrystov’s videos including a ‘miracle’ escape from a Russian drone attack when he had to run for his life after spotting it flying overhead.

 [Dramatic first-person footage of aid worker running from Putin’s drones]
Image Credit: Metro [Dramatic first-person footage of aid worker running from Putin’s drones]

He told Metro that he saw ‘death with my own eyes’ in one of his dramatic clips from the all-out invasion which reaches the three-year mark today. Another tense moment involved a man saying he didn’t want to leave his ruined house after the rescuer dashed in, ‘because I still have half of it.’.

 [Dramatic first-person footage of aid worker running from Putin’s drones]
Image Credit: Metro [Dramatic first-person footage of aid worker running from Putin’s drones]

Some of Deny’s evacuations have taken place as enemy fire has struck around him, forcing him to take cover. Despite risking his life, the 41-year-old aid worker, who was born in the Amur region of far east Russia but grew up in Ukraine, views the civilians he rescues as the brave ones.

 [Dramatic first-person footage of aid worker running from Putin’s drones]
Image Credit: Metro [Dramatic first-person footage of aid worker running from Putin’s drones]

‘I see death, destruction, constant pain, people’s struggle with their fear, I see heroism – because leaving your home is heroic,ʼ he said. The film-maker, who records from his phone and a GoPro on his tactical helmet, built a career as a TV presenter in Ukraine.

 [Dramatic first-person footage of aid worker running from Putin’s drones]
Image Credit: Metro [Dramatic first-person footage of aid worker running from Putin’s drones]

He previously delivered humanitarian aid, such as food and sanitary supplies, to frontline areas in the Donbas before beginning his life-saving work evacuating civilians. Denys responds to requests from families of people who have become stranded due to the changing battlefield situation, with many being elderly or otherwise unable or unwilling to leave their homes.

 [Dramatic first-person footage of aid worker running from Putin’s drones]
Image Credit: Metro [Dramatic first-person footage of aid worker running from Putin’s drones]

Some have been left with no mobile phone or internet coverage due to their proximity to the frontline and are in danger of being cut off from outside help altogether. Denys’ missions have included many fraught moments in these bombed-out neighbourhoods where Russian drones, shellfire or missiles could strike at any moment.

 [Dramatic first-person footage of aid worker running from Putin’s drones]
Image Credit: Metro [Dramatic first-person footage of aid worker running from Putin’s drones]

One video shot earlier this month shows the responder walking by a severely damaged shopping centre in Pokrovsk, a city in the Donetsk region heavily targeted by advancing Russian forces. Wearing a helmet and flak jacket, he pans his phone camera around to catch a white object flying in the sky before running for cover as an explosion sounds nearby.

‘One sunny day, I came to get an evacuation order,’ Denys said. ‘I left my car because it was no longer safe to drive. I walked through the market and saw a small white plane flying, I thought it was a drone. ‘After that stress, my right eye was red. I saw death with my own eyes. It flew in front of me.

‘By some miracle, it flew in the other direction. ‘But the local who was walking with me did not even blink, his sense of danger was so atrophied.’. Another video taken in the embattled city shows a resident on the stairwell of an apartment block where the ground floor has been reduced to a charred ruin in a severely damaged neighbourhood.

The clip shot earlier this month shows the man refusing to leave after Denys and a Ukrainian soldier dash in to save him. ‘We received a request from a woman to evacuate a man,’ Denys said. ‘We found him and we asked him: “Are you going to leave?” He replied: “No!” When we said he didn’t have his house any more he replied that he still had half of it.’.

On his Instagram account, Denys said: ‘We went almost straight into hell to save this guy. His wife is waiting, his grandchildren are waiting. ‘But he has other plans — for life or for death.’. Denys, from Kyiv, also shared that evacuations of people unwilling to leave are ‘exhausting’ and he decided to share the footage to counter Russian propaganda that nothing is being done for civilians in frontline areas.

Covering more than a million kilometres since the all-out attack was launched, his missions have taken him into wrecked neighbourhoods and along roads where Russian drones attack civilian targets. However the relief worker has found that the most difficult task is persuading people who are in imminent danger to leave their homes.

‘At first, I thought I had chosen the easiest path,’ he said of his humanitarian work. ‘But after working alongside the military on evacuations, I realised just how difficult it truly is. ‘It is difficult not to drive into the danger zone and evacuate, it is difficult to persuade, gain trust, and convince people that it is safe to go with you.’.

The dangers were starkly demonstrated in January when British volunteer Edward Scott was seriously injured while evacuating civilians from the city. The 28-year-old former sailor, from Dorset, who was working for Base UA, needed to have his left arm and leg amputated after a Russian drone struck an armoured rescue vehicle he was driving.

Denys weighed the fine line between life and death in philosophical terms. ‘The final destination is very different for each volunteer,’ he said. ‘Some have already met it, unfortunately, while others are more fortunate and continue their journey.’.

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