Chicago police officers shot an unarmed man in the back during a confrontation in a subway station after he passed between two cars of a train, video shows.

The footage, released Tuesday by the city’s Civilian Office of Police Accountability, shows two Chicago cops struggling with 33-year-old short-order cook Ariel Roman on a Red Line subway platform on Feb. 28.

The officers are seen atop Roman as they try to subdue him while he pleads, “I didn’t do nothing to you,” video shows.

Roman continues to ignore the officers’ commands to comply before one of the cops tells his female partner to “shoot him,” the new footage shows.

“No, no, no,” Roman replies.

“Shoot him!” the officer orders a second time. “Stop resisting! Give me your hands!”

Roman then gets to his feet as he is told repeatedly to stop resisting and appears to walk toward one of the officers as he is shot in the abdomen, video shows.

A second shot is fired as Roman dashes up an escalator, striking him in the buttocks. He collapses as the officers take him into custody, video shows.

Mayor Lori Lightfoot characterized cellphone footage of the confrontation captured by a subway rider as “extremely disturbing,” the Chicago Tribune reports. The officer-involved shooting remains under investigation by the Cook County State’s Attorney’s Office with help from the FBI, the newspaper reports.

The officers, Melvina Bogard and Bernard Butler, have been stripped of their police powers as the probe continues. Their conduct is also being investigated by the Civilian Office of Police Accountability, which released 18 videos and documents connected to the shooting Tuesday.

Roman, who survived, is suing the city and its police department in a federal lawsuit, claiming he was “harassed, chased, tackled, pepper-sprayed, tasered and shot twice” by the officers. He’s expected to recover, but may need at least one additional surgery, one of his attorneys told the Tribune.

“He is not causing an issue,” attorney Greg Kulis said. “He’s not pushing people. Not aggressive. Not doing anything. There was really no reason that I could see to actually grab him and take him into custody in that form or fashion. It’s true to form as to what we’ve alleged in the [lawsuit], there was no reason to use deadly force.”

Chicago police officials, meanwhile, did “not have a response” to the release of the new footage, Sgt. Rocco Alioto told NBC News.