The Hungarian camerawoman who was caught tripping up a desperate refugee father carrying his child has been caught on a second video - kicking a fleeing girl.

Petra Laszlo is now set to face a criminal investigation over her shocking assaults, which she carried out while filming Syrian refugees as they fled across a field on the Hungarian-Serbian border.

Laszlo has also been fired from her job at Hungarian news site N1TV, which is run by the anti-immigration far-right Jobbik party.

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The initial footage which emerged last night showed her deliberately sticking her leg out as a desperate man carrying a crying child ran past her at holding area in Roszke.

The clip showed the refugee falling to the floor with the child underneath him before he turned to shout at her.

Today, another clip filmed from another angle shows her kicking a young girl across the thigh as she is trying to flee police.

Laszlo was sacked with immediate effect after the TV station saw the footage online, and she has been subjected to torrents of justified hatred on social media

A statement posted on the station's website read: 'Today, a N1TV colleague behaved unacceptably at the Roszke reception centre.

'The cameraman's employment was terminated with immediate effect.'

Vile: Petra Laszlo was caught on camera kicking a young refugee girl as she flees with other migrants from a police line during disturbances at Roszke

Disgusting: The Hungarian video journalist can be seen kicking the little girl across the legs with all her might

Shameful: Laszlo, who attacked both the little girl and tripped up a father carrying his child, is now facing a criminal investigation into her actions, and she has been sacked from her job

Opposition parties Együtt-PM and the Democratic Coalition also said they will seek to initiate charges of violence against a member of the community, which carries a sentence of up to five years in prison, against Laszlo.

Outraged social media users took to Twitter and set a Facebook group called The Petra Laszlo Wall Of Shame to condemn her actions, labelling her 'pathetic' and 'disgraceful'.

Davie McLaughlin wrote: 'It would appear that a Hungarian camerawoman has become this month's American dentist. This time, it deserves every ounce of condemnation.'

Usman Ali Khan added: 'Such pathetic behaviour of a #Hungarian camerawoman deliberately tripping a refugee carrying a child.'

And Tim Marshall, a foreign affairs analyst, said: 'From the angle where Hungarian "camerawoman" kicks the child I don't think the benefit of doubt applies... Disgraceful.'

The man Laszlo tripped was one of several hundred migrants who fled after being angered at the treatment by Hungarian police.

The migrants had been part of a group of 1,500 people who had been waiting for hours at a refugee collection point near the Roszke crossing.

Hungarian camerawoman Petra Laszlo has been caught kicking and tripping over migrants as they escaped from police officers who were making them wait on the border between Hungary and Serbia

Laszlo, working for N1TV, was filming the crowds of Syrian refugees as they ran across a field from Roszke camp. Above, the man who gets tripped over is pictured moments before carrying a crying child

The man was caught off guard and landed heavily with the child underneath him while the woman continued to watch

The refugee and child, who were carrying several bags, landed on the floor after Laszlo tripped them

Outraged social media users took to Twitter to condemn the woman's actions, labelling her 'pathetic' and 'disgraceful'

Petra Laszlo (above) worked for Hungarian news site N1TV which is run by the anti-immigration far-right Jobbik party

Pictures showed some carrying small children as they ran through fields and began following train tracks towards the town of Szeged in a desperate bid to move on.

Police were seen following the migrants, who are hoping to reach other countries who are welcoming them in western Europe, and many officers did not attempt to stop them.

Hungary has made frantic and confused efforts to control the huge tide of migrants transiting the country, with many refugees becoming trapped for days outside the border.

Around 167,000 migrants have entered Hungary illegally so far this year, with most crossing the border around the Roszke area.

Last Friday, among a raft of anti-migrant laws approved, Hungary's parliament voted to criminalise illegal border crossing, with the ruling expected to come into force on September 15.

Some refugees, who slept outdoors in a field overnight so they could wait for a train this afternoon, said conditions were so bad they wanted to return across the border to Serbia.

One Syrian, who gave his first name as Ali, said: 'We've been here for two days and the Hungarian government only brings one bus?

'We're asking to go back to Serbia and they are not giving us this right. We're asking to go to Budapest and they are not giving us this right. Why? Why?'

A migrant helps another pass under a fence after they broke through a police cordon near Roszk, Hungary

Hundreds of migrantsbroke through police lines in Hungary near the main crossing point from Serbia today

Migrants pass under a fence after they broke through a police line near Roszke at the Hungarian-Serbian border

Men, women and children climb over fences with their belongings after breaking through a police cordon today

Two migrant men climb over a fence at the Hungarian-Serbian border in a bid to reach western Europe

The U.N. refugee agency added that it was concerned about the lack of proper reception facilities in the border area.

Spokesman Babar Baloch said: 'The border police are not trained to deal with the refugees.

'When people come in you need to receive them properly. There are woman and children and they are just kept in the open.

'Temperatures are going down as well so we need to have a system where these people receive proper care.'

Earlier today, Prime Minister Viktor Orban announced fresh efforts to complete a fence to keep the refugees out.

Meanwhile, fresh clashes erupted between police and migrants on the Greek island of Lesbos last night, which authorities said was 'on the verge of explosion'.

The news pushed Britain and France into pledging to accept tens of thousands more refugees from the record influx.

HUNGARIAN MOTORWAY CLOSED AS MIGRANTS BREAK THROUGH CORDON Police were forced to close a motorway after groups of migrants broke through a cordon at Roszke on the border with Serbia and set off on foot. State news agency MTI reported that as many as 200 to 250 migrants left a collection point for migrants near the border after police could no longer contain a group of mainly young men pushing against their cordon. Hundreds of migrants break out of a police holding area and through lines of riot police in Roszke, Hungary, before crossing the M5 motorway Police were forced to close a motorway after groups of migrants broke through a cordon at Roszke, Hungary A local news website said 400 migrants broke free from the collection point and half set out on the motorway Police attempted to round up migrants at an intersection along the M5 motorway near Roszke in Hungary A migrant family walks across the middle lane of M5 highway after they broke through a police cordon A migrant family clambers across the middle lane of M5 highway close tothe Hungarian-Serbian border Police were trying to round up migrants at an intersection along the M5 motorway, MTI said. Local news website Index said some 400 migrants broke free from the collection point and half of them set out on the motorway, the other half on a secondary road towards the city of Szeged. Advertisement

The man the camerawoman tripped was one of several hundred migrants who fled after being angered at the treatment by Hungarian police. Above, the group just before many ran from police

The migrants - including this boy carrying a young child - had been part of a group of 1,500 people who had been waiting for hours at a refugee collection point near the Roszke crossing

A migrant falls face-first between railway tracks after trying to break through a police cordon on the Hungarian border

EU CHIEF TO UNVEIL PLAN TO RELOCATE 120,000 MIGRANTS ACROSS EUROPE FROM ITALY, GREECE AND HUNGARY European Commission chief Jean-Claude Juncker will unveil a plan on Wednesday for EU states to take 120,000 refugees from overstretched Italy, Greece and Hungary. Under the plan, Germany, France and Spain would together relocate nearly 60 per cent of the 120,000 refugees currently in the three countries. Germany would take 31,443 refugees (26.2 per cent), France would take 24,031 (20 per cent) and Spain 14,931 (12.4 per cent) over the next two years. The next biggest intakes would be Poland, the Netherlands, Romania, Belgium and Sweden. Member states that refuse the quotas are expected to be asked to offer financial compensation instead. The quotas are worked out by a distribution key according to the country's GDP (40 per cent), population (40 per cent), unemployment rate (10 per cent) and already-processed asylum applications. Britain, Ireland and Denmark are not required under EU treaties to participate in the plan. The plan comes on top of a Juncker proposal in May for quotas for the relocation of nearly 40,000 mainly Syrian and Eritrean refugees from Italy and Greece. EU leaders failed to agree on quotas at a summit in June and instead said they would take just 32,000 refugees. Many European governments feared a populist or anti-immigrant backlash at home. Advertisement

Austria and Germany are already welcoming refugees, with many travelling from Budapest's Keleti train station.

EU's foreign affairs chief Federica Mogherini called on 'all European leaders... to take decisions that are coherent with the emotions they express'.

Mr Orban said quotas would be futile unless Europe's frontiers were shored up.

Orban mocked the European Union's efforts to distribute migrants through a quota system and compared Hungary to a 'black sheep' representing a voice of reason in the EU flock.

Calling on Germany to end its 'open-door' policy, he said: 'We represent the position of what the Americans call "first things first".

'As long as we are unable to defend Europe's external borders, it makes no sense to talk about the fate of the immigrants.'

Many of the migrants were angry at having to wait for hours in the open for buses to take them to a registration centre. Above, a man carries a crying child as police stand guard

The scene was chaotic at times, with police choosing not to stop many of the migrants running away

Dozens of police circled around the migrants they managed to catch to prevent them getting any further away from the registration centre