Hurricane Irma: France, UK and Netherlands step up response
European countries are boosting relief efforts in their Caribbean territories devastated by Hurricane Irma, amid criticism over the response.
French President Emmanuel Macron, who is visiting French islands that took the full force of the storm, said a huge "airlift" was bringing more aid.
UK Foreign Minister Boris Johnson is due in the region and the king of the Netherlands is touring Dutch islands.
Irma killed at least 23 people in the three countries' overseas territories.
The victims include 10 dead on the French island of St Barts and on the French part of St Martin - which is shared with the Netherlands.
As he arrived in the region on Tuesday, President Macron said the government had responded with "one of the biggest airlifts since World War Two".
He told reporters that last week's hurricane had been almost unprecedented and that the effort had been hampered by a second hurricane, Jose, in the area days later.
He promised to "shake up all the rules and procedures" to rebuild the islands "as quickly as possible". Later on Tuesday he saw for himself the damage in Saint-Martin.
Critics have accused Mr Macron's government of not doing enough to help hurricane victims and prevent looting on St Barts and Saint-Martin.
The UK government has faced similar complaints following the death of at least nine people people on British territories.
Mr Johnson is due to visit the British Virgin Islands and Anguilla, which have also suffered widespread devastation.
The BBC's Laura Bicker and Paul Blake on Tortola island say many neighbourhoods have been flattened, and their residents can be seen trying to cook and clean amidst the rubble.
About 1,000 UK soldiers are now in the region to deliver aid, and more troops and supplies are due in the coming days, officials say.
Meanwhile King Willem-Alexander is visiting Dutch territories, where at least four people were killed. He spent Monday night in Sint Maarten - the Dutch side of St Martin - and is due to travel on to other islands.
"I've seen proper war as well as natural disasters before, but I've never seen anything like this," he told Dutch radio on Tuesday. "Everywhere you look there's devastation, you see the collapse."
Irma struck other Caribbean islands with deadly force, including Cuba, Barbuda, Puerto Rico and the US Virgin Islands.
On the US mainland, it has been linked to 12 deaths since the weekend. The Florida Keys, a low-lying chain of islands, were hit particularly hard by the category-four hurricane.
On Thursday, President Donald Trump is due to visit Florida, where some 60% of homes are still without power.
The storm was downgraded as it moved north into Georgia, the National Hurricane Center (NHC) said in a statement.
Which areas were hit before Florida?
Irma has been the most powerful Atlantic storm in a decade, and caused widespread destruction on several Caribbean islands:
- Cuba: At least 10 people were killed, officials say. Three-quarters of the population are without power
- St Martin and St Barts: Six out of 10 homes on St Martin, an island shared between France and the Netherlands, are now uninhabitable, French officials say. Ten people died in the French territories while four are known to have died in Dutch Sint-Maarten
- Turks and Caicos Islands: Widespread damage, although extent unclear
- Barbuda: The small island is said to be "barely habitable", with 95% of the buildings damaged. One death has been confirmed
- Anguilla: Extensive damage with four people confirmed dead in the British overseas territory
- British Virgin Islands: Widespread damage reported, and five dead
- Puerto Rico: More than 6,000 residents of the US territory are in shelters and many more without power. At least three people have died
- US Virgin Islands: Damage to infrastructure was said to be widespread, with four deaths confirmed