United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon called on donor nations Sunday to ramp up aid to
typhoon-battered Philippines as it grapples with a funding shortfall on the long road to recovery.
"We must not allow this to be another forgotten crisis," Ban told reporters a day after touring the storm-ravaged city of Tacloban.
He said the UN had only achieved 30 per cent of the $US791 million ($A895 million) in aid it had appealed for to boost relief and rehabilitation efforts in areas devastated by Super Typhoon
Haiyan last month.
"I am appealing (to) the donor community, to speed up, scale up their support," Ban said, adding that he had met the ambassadors ofkey donor countries in Manila on Sunday.
He said he was deeply moved and inspired by his visit to Tacloban on Saturday, where despite the many challenges "people are working hard to recover".
NEVER DESPAIR: BAN KI-MOON
On Saturday, Ban urged Philippine typhoon survivors to "never despair" as he pledged to rally global backing to help them recover from one of their country's deadliest disasters.
"Never despair. The UN is behind you. The world is behind you," the UN chief said on Saturday during a visit to the devastated central city of Tacloban, which suffered more than 5000 deaths from Super Typhoon Haiyan, which swept through the central islands of the Philippines on November 8.
Wearing a baseball cap, the 69-year-old South Korean UN chief walked through a narrow, debris-strewn street in Fatima, a coastal district in the city of 220,000 people where tsunami-like storm surges wrought by the typhoon obliterated entire neighbourhoods.
A ship that ploughed through the neighbourhood after being hurled by huge waves lay stranded nearby, six weeks after the deluge.
Ban also visited a Tacloban tent school, put up by the UN Children's Fund (UNICEF), where pupils sang Christmas carols for him. He handed out backpacks to almost 200 primary school children there.
The typhoon, one of the strongest ever to hit land, left 6102 people dead and 1779 others missing, according to a government tally.
Ravaging an area the size of Portugal, it inflicted $US12.9 billion ($A14.6 billion) in damage and left 4.4 million people homeless.
The Philippine government said it would need $US8.17 billion over four years in a massive rebuilding effort.
The UN earlier this month launched a global $US791-million call for aid to take care of the needs of the survivors over the next 12 months.
Ban told reporters he was "very impressed" with the residents' efforts to get back on their feet.
"The people of Tacloban are a very resilient people and are returning to their normal lives," he added.
Ban arrived in the Philippine capital Manila late on Friday for a three-day visit and called on President Benigno Aquino earlier Saturday before flying to Tacloban.
"President Aquino thanked Mr Ban for the United Nations' support for our relief and rehabilitation efforts," Aquino spokeswoman Abigail Valte said on government radio.
"The president also thanked Mr Ban for the visit, for showing concern for our people," she added.

