Rescuers are struggling to get desperately needed aid to areas of the Philippines devastated by Typhoon Haiyan - as a new storm approaches.
Aid workers are being held back by blocked roads and damaged airports as they try to deliver tents, food and medicines to the worst-affected areas.
Troops have been sent to the city of Tacloban to restore law and order after reports of looting, with Filipino President Benigno Aquino declaring a state of calamity and considering whether martial law is necessary.
Vehicles were left strewn amid the destruction in Tacloban (pic: Unicef)Looters have reportedly broken into supermarkets, while a Red Cross aid convoy was raided. Consumer goods such as televisions and washing machines have also been stolen.
With at least 10,000 people thought to have been killed by the typhoon and two million affected, British Prime Minister David Cameron announced the UK would contribute £10m to aid efforts.
Britain will also deploy Royal Navy warship HMS Daring to provide humanitarian assistance and RAF military transport aircraft to take equipment and supplies.
Children plead for help in typhoon-hit town TabogonIn Tacloban, corpses hung from trees and were scattered in the streets. As others remained buried in flattened buildings, survivors were left pleading for food, water and medicine.
One UN official said he was told there had been a three-metre (10ft) water surge through the city.
A further 300 are confirmed dead and 2,000 missing on the neighbouring island of Samar.
A woman mourns next to the body of her husband and othersWater has been cut off in many areas, making the relief effort more difficult.
Threatening to further hamper relief efforts is a new storm approaching the southern and central Philippines.
Government weather forecasters said the tropical depression could bring fresh floods to typhoon-affected areas.
The depression is expected to hit land on the southern island of Mindanao late Tuesday and then move across the central islands of Bohol, Cebu, Negros and Panay, which all suffered typhoon damage, forecaster Connie Dadivas said.
Survivors make their way through the rubble of destroyed buildingsIt could bring "moderate to heavy" rains, or about five to 15 millimetres (0.2 to 0.6 inches) per hour, he said.
Sky's Chief Correspondent Stuart Ramsay, in Manila, said: "The relief operation is only just getting going, it's fairly piecemeal at the moment.
A displaced child and her mother in an evacuation centre (pic: Unicef)"They really don't have the volume of aircraft they need to either get aircraft in or people out in sufficient quantities to try and control what has become, day-by-day, a more difficult situation."
At least six people have also been killed in Vietnam after the typhoon made landfall near the Chinese border.
Some 600,000 people were evacuated from at-risk areas in the north of the country before Haiyan - downgraded to a weaker Category One storm - battered the coast with 98mph (157kmph) winds.
Philippine Army members board a US plane on the way to help survivorsAll schools in capital Hanoi were closed on Monday and extra police were dispatched to redirect traffic in flood-prone areas.
At least two million people are said to have been directly affected by the typhoon's path and the death toll is expected to rise further as rescuers reach cut-off areas.
"This area has been totally ravaged", said Sebastien Sujobert, head of the International Committee of the Red Cross in Tacloban.
The winds felled trees and homes across swathes of the country"Many lives were lost, a huge number of people are missing, and basic services such as drinking water and electricity have been cut off."
Haiyan hit the east coast of the Philippines on Friday and smashed through its central islands, with winds of 147mph (235 kmph) and a storm surge of 20ft (six metres).
Video from Eastern Samar province's Guiuan township - the first area where the typhoon made landfall - also showed a trail of devastation. Many houses were flattened and roads were strewn with debris and uprooted trees.
Survivors now face the prospect of rebuilding their livesWitnesses reported seeing looting and violence, with President Aquino admitting it was a major concern.
Military spokesman Lieutenant Colonel Ramon Zagala told AFP news agency that 100 soldiers had been sent to help police restore law and order in Tacloban.
The United Nations said it was sending supplies but access to the worst-hit areas was a challenge.
Looters carry away supplies from a shopUS Defence Secretary Chuck Hagel has directed the military's Pacific Command to deploy ships and aircraft to support search-and-rescue operations and airlift emergency supplies.
The European Commission has released €3m (£2.5m) in emergency funds, while the UK is providing £6m in aid and Prime Minister David Cameron has telephoned President Aquino to offer his support.
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