Living on the front lines of the Ukraine conflict
The photojournalist Filip Warwick has been documenting violence on the front lines of the fighting in eastern Ukraine. Rocket and shrapnel fire have damaged many residential areas, leaving people desperate.
Immeasurable suffering
A Mariupol resident grieves after his ninth-floor flat was destroyed by a Grad missile. "I don't know what to do," he says in the courtyard. "I've become homeless this morning."
Suddenly worthless
An 83-year-old Mariupol pensioner stands outside her house, which was destroyed by the Grad strike. All her belongings are now scattered.
Surrounded by danger
Debaltseve: A woman boards up her window after a missile hit the building in the early morning. Incoming and outgoing fire can be heard constantly throughout the day.
Improvised bomb shelter
Popasna residents return to their basement after collecting water and blankets handed out by a local nongovernmental organization. Many fear the conflict will never end.
Deep fear
Out of fear, a young family had remained in the basement of a residential block in Mariupol all day after a rocket strike. Late in the night, an emergency service team assisted the family in getting to a hostel. They were too afraid to return home.
Red alert
Police guard damaged residential and commercial property. The threat of a follow-up strike put the force on full alert.
Widespread destruction
Popasna is one of many towns near the front lines of Ukraine's civil war. A woman picks her way through the rubble around residential flats that were damaged earlier in the day by a rocket.
Improvised repairs
A morning rocket strike hit a section of a residential area, shattering windows. A local resident uses wood to repair his windows, which now offer even less shelter from the cold.
Generation of hardship
Danilo, who is 9 years old, lives in Popasna. His parents have told him they have nowhere to go, and no place to evacuate to.
Helping themselves
A local welder repairs a damaged gas pipe. Shrapnel from mortar and rocket strikes litter the residential area. With overstretched emergency services, some locals have taken it upon themselves to repair key elements of the local infrastructure.
Strained services
A senior medical doctor double-checks a list of patients to be evacuated from the psychiatric clinic in Popasna. With shelling heard in the distance and a Grad rocket landing 500 meters (1,650 feet) away, hospital authorities decided the clinic was no longer safe.