CBS/AP/ November 15, 2013, 5:22 AM

Philippines typhoon response defended by officials, who say all hard-hit areas should get aid Friday

A young boy, a survivor of Typhoon Haiyan covers his ears as military C-130 aircraft land at the airport in Tacloban, Nov. 15, 2013 in Tacloban city, Leyte province, central Philippines.

A young boy, a survivor of Typhoon Haiyan covers his ears as military C-130 aircraft land at the airport in Tacloban, Nov. 15, 2013 in Tacloban city, Leyte province, central Philippines. / AP

TACLOBAN, Philippines The Philippine government on Friday defended its efforts to deliver assistance to victims of Typhoon Haiyan, many of whom have received little or no assistance since the monster storm struck one week ago.

"In a situation like this, nothing is fast enough," Interior Secretary Mar Roxas said in Tacloban, most of which was destroyed by the storm one week ago. "The need is massive, the need is immediate, and you can't reach everyone."

The number of confirmed dead jumped more than 1,200 to 3,621, Eduardo del Rosario, executive director of the National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council told reporters Friday.

Some officials estimate that the final toll, when the missing are declared dead and remote regions reached, will be more than 10,000. At least 600,000 people have been displaced.

Authorities are struggling to meet their immediate needs, an expected occurrence after major disasters, especially in already poor countries where local and national governments lack capacity.

Typhoon survivors who have been waiting to be evacuated for days at the airport in Tacloban, reach out for biscuits distributed by Philippines soldiers

Typhoon survivors who have been waiting to be evacuated for days at the airport in Tacloban, reach out for biscuits distributed by Philippines soldiers, in Tacloban city, Leyte province, Nov. 15, 2013.

/ AP

The pace of the aid effort has picked up over the last 24 hours, according to reporters who have been in the region for several days. Foreign governments are dispatching food, water, medical supplies and trained staff to the region. Trucks and generators are also arriving.

But many people complain that the aid effort is inadequate.

In Tacloban city, the big challenge is the restoration of power, where many electric posts are down. But the storm debris was hindering the effort.

CBS News correspondent Seth Doane reported that utility workers were back on the job Thursday in Tacloban, but it wasn't to restore power -- they were still cleaning up the mess. It was the same all over the decimated city, said Doane; almost a week after the typhoon tore through the Philippines, very little had changed.

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Tacloban starts cleaning up as residents continue to wait for aid

Doane met a family in Tacloban whose small electronics shop was destroyed. Asked how he would start over, Ronald Calipayan told Doane he simply didn't know. No aid had reached their neighborhood as of Thursday. Ronald's 14-year-old nephew Kenji admitted that he had joined the looters in the city.

"I feel bad a little," the young man said about stealing things, but he explained bluntly that, "we can't survive if we don't have any food."

"The government's distribution system is not enough. They are handing out small food packets to each household. But when you have three families inside one home, one little packet is not enough," said Renee Patron, 33, an American citizen of Filipino descent who was in Guiuan city on eastern Samar province when the typhoon struck.

Her friend, Susan Tan, whose grocery store and warehouse were completely looted after the typhoon, is despondent but determined to carry on with her life and help others.

She's now using her empty warehouse as a center from where people can make calls on a satellite phone she got from a friend who works for local telecoms company Smart. There has been no cell phone service in the town since last Friday.

34 Photos

Typhoon victims begin long road to recovery

"This was my store. Now's it's a relief center and a call center," said Tan, 43. "It was ransacked by panicked ... people desperate for food. There was no way to control them. We had stocked up on food for the Christmas holidays. They took everything, and not just the food. They ransacked my office too, anything they could find. They took away our furniture."

Now, the blue shelves are empty. Still it is serving a purpose, with about 100 people queued up outside waiting to make calls. The free calls are limited to one minute each.

Johnny Ogriman, one of the men waiting in the line, said he has not spoken to any family members since the typhoon hit last week. "I'm trying to call my brother in Saudi Arabia. I want to let him know that we're alive, that we're safe," he said.

"Although I've been looted and bankrupt by this, I cannot refuse my friends and my town. We need to help each other," she said. "I can't just go to Cebu and sit in the mall while this place is in ruins."

Defense Secretary Voltaire Gazmin told The Associated Press that armed forces have set up communications lines and C-130 transport planes are conducting regular flights to Tacloban, the capital of Leyte.

"The biggest challenge is to be able to reach out to all the areas and overwhelm them with food and water. There are just a few more areas in Leyte and Samar that have not been reached and our hope is that we will reach all these areas today, 100 percent," he said.

Troops were removing bodies near the sea with the help of the Departments of Health, Public Works and Highways, he said. Thursday saw the first mass-burial of dozens of the storm's victims in Tacloban.

Water filtration systems are also operating in Tacloban and two other towns in Leyte province, the hardest-hit area. Helicopters are dropping relief supplies, he said.

Gazmin said that looting has been brought under control and no incidents have been reported over the past two days. "Our augmentation of the police and Philippine army was able to stop the problem of lawlessness," he said.

Aircraft carrier

U.S. Navy aircraft carrier USS George Washington and other ships from the George Washington Strike Group are seen in 2010 file photo.

/ AP

A U.S. aircraft carrier, the USS George Washington, is moored off the coast, preparing for a major relief mission. The fleet of helicopters on board is expected to drop food and water to the worst affected areas. The aircraft carrier will set up a position off the coast of Samar Island to assess the damage and provide medical and water supplies, the 7th Fleet said in a statement.

The carrier and its strike group together bring 21 helicopters to the area, which can help reach the most inaccessible parts of the disaster zone.

The United Kingdom also is sending an aircraft carrier, the HMS Illustrious, with seven helicopters and facilities to produce fresh water, Britain's Ministry of Defense said. It said the ship is expected to reach the area about Nov. 25.

© 2013 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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oldtymer-1 says:
The PI has been corrupt for decades. Even with Marcos gone the corruption exists. Many go overseas for work. To Dubai, Kuwait, Doha, KSA and Korea. Most are women and most of those supplement their eager salaries by selling themselves at night for sex. They do this because they went overseas to send money home to help the families. The poverty and corruption still exists and they expect a outsider to help with their issues. They created their system and they need to repair it.
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