A mother stands by the rubble, crying out for her daughter.
For days she has been waiting for rescue workers to dig through the flattened remains of what was once her daughter's flat in Resalat, a residential district in eastern Tehran.
They don't have the manpower to get her out, the woman says.
My daughter is under the rubble... she's afraid of the dark.
For a month, Iran has been at war with the United States and Israel, who have been carrying out strikes across the country at targets linked to the regime.
But these attacks are also having a devastating impact on civilians living nearby.
They are now being caught between bombardment from the skies and a repressive regime that responded to anti-establishment protests with a deadly crackdown in January.
Since the start of the war, BBC Eye has gathered exclusive footage from independent journalists inside Tehran.
Our analysis shows there has been a series of attacks on state-linked targets that are embedded in civilian neighbourhoods in Tehran, with deadly consequences for those living around them.
Local authorities and residents say between 40 and 50 people were killed in a single Israeli air strike on 9 March, which destroyed a multi-storey apartment building where dozens of families lived.
The devastation illustrates how military actions in densely populated areas can lead to grave humanitarian crises, as civilians continue to bear the brunt of the conflict in Tehran.




















