British warship HMS Daring has arrived in the Typhoon Haiyan disaster zone, as the president of the Philippines visited devastated areas.
The Type 45 destroyer and her crew docked at the island of Cebu ready to provide humanitarian assistance, the Department for International Aid and Development said.
It has spent the last three days carrying out reconnaissance work in and around the southeast Asian nation, using a helicopter to survey 48 islands, including areas which have not yet been reached by international relief teams.
The Lynx helicopter will now be used to fly shelter kits, food and medical supplies to those remote areas.
Members of a 12-strong medical team from the UK, which arrived in the Philippines earlier this week, will also be flown to different areas to treat injured victims of the typhoon.
The Lynx helicopter is on board HMS DaringHMS Daring Commander Angus Essenhigh told Sky News: "We're very much looking forward to getting into the fight tomorrow and delivering some of the aid where it's most needed."
Sky's Defence Correspondent Alistair Bunkall, on board the warship, said: "They will no doubt be the first outsiders to reach some of these devastated areas since typhoon struck."
The typhoon - said to be the strongest ever to make landfall - slammed into the Philippines on November 7, killing thousands of people.
The typhoon hit the country on November 7President Benigno Aquino, caught off guard by the scale of the disaster and criticised by some for the sometimes chaotic response, has been visiting affected areas.
Not for the first time, he sought to deflect blame for the problems onto local authorities whose preparations he said had fallen short.
Mr Aquino delivers a speech in GuiuanIn Guiuan, a hard-hit coastal town in eastern Samar province, he praised the city mayor for conducting a proper evacuation that had limited deaths to less than 100, saying that was a contrast to other towns.
"In other places, I prefer not to talk about it. As your president, I am not allowed to get angry even if I am already upset," he said.
"I'll just suffer through it with an acidic stomach."
Mr Aquino spoke of his appreciation for the volunteers, and also promised his nation that those who have been affected will receive continued support.
"Your government will not be remiss in providing everything, everything, everything that you will need," he said.
While aid packages have begun to reach more remote areas, much of it carried by helicopters brought by the USS George Washington aircraft carrier, the United Nations said people were still going hungry in some mountainous provinces.
It said information about several provinces in the west of the Visayas region remained "limited", with 60% of people in towns in the northeast part of Capiz province needing food support.
Victims run to an aid helicopter in a mountainous area west of TaclobanMore than a week after Typhoon killed at least 3,633 people, the UN has doubled its estimate of homeless to nearly two million.
There are still 1,179 people missing, according to national figures.
A number of Britons are missing following the disaster, Foreign Secretary William Hague confirmed on Saturday.
Among those feared dead is Colin Bembridge, 61, from Grimsby, who was staying with his partner Maybelle, 35, and their three-year-old daughter Victoria near Tacloban when the storm hit.
British Prime Minister David Cameron pledged an additional £30m on Saturday for international aid agencies working in the country. It brings the total amount pledged by the British Government to £50m
The amount the British public has donated to the Disasters Emergency Committee's (DEC) typhoon appeal has reached 35m.
Sunday mass still went ahead in adestroyed cathedral in PaloRoyal Navy aircraft carrier HMS Illustrious is also being sent to replace HMS Daring.
The aid effort continues as the DEC appeal charities warned leaders meeting at UN climate talks in Warsaw that the disaster offers a glimpse of the future if urgent action is not taken.
Aid agencies including Christian Aid, Cafod, Care International, Oxfam and Tearfund said ministers meeting in the Polish capital must act urgently because climate change is likely to make such extreme weather events more common in future.
Climate models forecast that typhoons could become more powerful and that weather-related events around the world will be more extreme and frequent, they warned.
Delegates from 195 countries are taking part in the annual UN climate talks, which are taking place until November 22.
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