<p>Jennifer Vetonio stands on a road in the southern Philippines begging for money and food from passing drivers. A week after Super Typhoon Rai destroyed her house, she has not received a scrap of government aid.</p>.<p>Hundreds of thousands of people are homeless after Rai cut a swathe through the vast archipelago last Thursday, knocking out power across entire islands and leaving desperate survivors pleading for help.</p>.<p>"We don't have food, my baby has no milk or diapers," said Vetonio, 23, in the devastated city of Surigao, on the northern tip of Mindanao island.</p>.<p>"I hope the government will help us -- even a little aid would help us recover," she said, holding a plastic bottle with the top cut off that she uses to collect alms from motorists.</p>.<p>The military, coast guard and humanitarian organisations have ramped up efforts to get food, drinking water and temporary shelter to the hardest-hit islands.</p>.<p>President Rodrigo Duterte has declared a state of calamity in the typhoon-affected areas, where at least 375 people were killed, freeing up funds for relief efforts and giving local officials power to control prices.</p>.<p><strong>Also read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/375-dead-56-missing-after-typhoon-slams-philippines-1062888.html" target="_blank">375 dead, 56 missing after typhoon slams Philippines</a></strong></p>.<p>But the scale of the destruction, lack of mobile phone signal or internet in many areas, and depleted government coffers after the Covid-19 response were hampering efforts to distribute aid.</p>.<p>The damage caused by Rai has been likened to Super Typhoon Haiyan in 2013.</p>.<p>Siargao, Dinagat, Mindanao and Bohol islands are among the most devastated by the latest storm, which tore off roofs, shredded wooden buildings, felled concrete power poles and uprooted trees.</p>.<p>"So many houses were destroyed," Red Cross chairman Richard Gordon told AFP.</p>.<p>"Destruction is destruction. It's just the cycle of poverty all over again."</p>.<p>Rai hit the Philippines late in the typhoon season: most cyclones develop between July and October.</p>.<p>Anna Cloren from the state weather forecaster said the storm intensified faster than expected, and initial data showed it had dumped more rain than Haiyan.</p>.<p>Scientists have long warned that typhoons are strengthening more rapidly as the world becomes warmer because of human-driven climate change.</p>.<p>The Philippines -- ranked among the most vulnerable nations to the impacts of climate change -- is hit by an average of 20 storms every year.</p>.<p>In 2013, Typhoon Haiyan was the strongest storm ever to have made landfall, leaving over 7,300 people dead or missing.</p>.<p>The death toll from Rai is not expected to get anywhere close to that number.</p>.<p>More than 500,000 people were still in evacuation centres or sheltering with relatives, the national disaster agency said Thursday.</p>.<p>Thousands of acres of crops have been wiped out, fishing communities devastated and tourism operators left with no livelihood.</p>.<p>Long queues of people waiting to refill empty water drums or fill up motorbike fuel tanks have been seen across the affected regions.</p>.<p>"Humanitarian needs and gaps are high across all sectors and the humanitarian situation may further deteriorate if these needs are not addressed immediately," the United Nations' humanitarian office warned.</p>.<p>"On the first day we got maybe a kilo of rice each," said Maria Consumo, 41, who is six months pregnant and begging for handouts on the side of a road near Surigao City.</p>.<p>"We think they gave priority to Siargao," she said, referring to the popular tourist destination where Rai made landfall packing wind speeds of 195 kilometres (120 miles) per hour.</p>.<p>Marites Sotis, 53, said most of her family's coconut trees were knocked down by the storm and it would take years to grow more.</p>.<p>"We're back to square one," she said.</p>.<p><strong>Check out latest videos from <i data-stringify-type="italic">DH</i>:</strong></p>
<p>Jennifer Vetonio stands on a road in the southern Philippines begging for money and food from passing drivers. A week after Super Typhoon Rai destroyed her house, she has not received a scrap of government aid.</p>.<p>Hundreds of thousands of people are homeless after Rai cut a swathe through the vast archipelago last Thursday, knocking out power across entire islands and leaving desperate survivors pleading for help.</p>.<p>"We don't have food, my baby has no milk or diapers," said Vetonio, 23, in the devastated city of Surigao, on the northern tip of Mindanao island.</p>.<p>"I hope the government will help us -- even a little aid would help us recover," she said, holding a plastic bottle with the top cut off that she uses to collect alms from motorists.</p>.<p>The military, coast guard and humanitarian organisations have ramped up efforts to get food, drinking water and temporary shelter to the hardest-hit islands.</p>.<p>President Rodrigo Duterte has declared a state of calamity in the typhoon-affected areas, where at least 375 people were killed, freeing up funds for relief efforts and giving local officials power to control prices.</p>.<p><strong>Also read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/375-dead-56-missing-after-typhoon-slams-philippines-1062888.html" target="_blank">375 dead, 56 missing after typhoon slams Philippines</a></strong></p>.<p>But the scale of the destruction, lack of mobile phone signal or internet in many areas, and depleted government coffers after the Covid-19 response were hampering efforts to distribute aid.</p>.<p>The damage caused by Rai has been likened to Super Typhoon Haiyan in 2013.</p>.<p>Siargao, Dinagat, Mindanao and Bohol islands are among the most devastated by the latest storm, which tore off roofs, shredded wooden buildings, felled concrete power poles and uprooted trees.</p>.<p>"So many houses were destroyed," Red Cross chairman Richard Gordon told AFP.</p>.<p>"Destruction is destruction. It's just the cycle of poverty all over again."</p>.<p>Rai hit the Philippines late in the typhoon season: most cyclones develop between July and October.</p>.<p>Anna Cloren from the state weather forecaster said the storm intensified faster than expected, and initial data showed it had dumped more rain than Haiyan.</p>.<p>Scientists have long warned that typhoons are strengthening more rapidly as the world becomes warmer because of human-driven climate change.</p>.<p>The Philippines -- ranked among the most vulnerable nations to the impacts of climate change -- is hit by an average of 20 storms every year.</p>.<p>In 2013, Typhoon Haiyan was the strongest storm ever to have made landfall, leaving over 7,300 people dead or missing.</p>.<p>The death toll from Rai is not expected to get anywhere close to that number.</p>.<p>More than 500,000 people were still in evacuation centres or sheltering with relatives, the national disaster agency said Thursday.</p>.<p>Thousands of acres of crops have been wiped out, fishing communities devastated and tourism operators left with no livelihood.</p>.<p>Long queues of people waiting to refill empty water drums or fill up motorbike fuel tanks have been seen across the affected regions.</p>.<p>"Humanitarian needs and gaps are high across all sectors and the humanitarian situation may further deteriorate if these needs are not addressed immediately," the United Nations' humanitarian office warned.</p>.<p>"On the first day we got maybe a kilo of rice each," said Maria Consumo, 41, who is six months pregnant and begging for handouts on the side of a road near Surigao City.</p>.<p>"We think they gave priority to Siargao," she said, referring to the popular tourist destination where Rai made landfall packing wind speeds of 195 kilometres (120 miles) per hour.</p>.<p>Marites Sotis, 53, said most of her family's coconut trees were knocked down by the storm and it would take years to grow more.</p>.<p>"We're back to square one," she said.</p>.<p><strong>Check out latest videos from <i data-stringify-type="italic">DH</i>:</strong></p>