Three days after Cyclone Pam, people in the shattered capital of Vanuatu are taking stock of the damage and trying to salvage what remains.<br /><br /> But in Port Vila and elsewhere in the South Pacific island nation, people are still stunned by the category five storm.<br /><br /> Rose Harry, a resident of the outer island of Tanna, described how she sat out the cyclone.<br /><br /> “We don’t know what to do. We collect the mattress and put it against the window,” she said.<br /><br /> Aid teams have landed on Tanna but Vanuatu has 65 inhabited islands – many of them difficult to reach – and time is of the essence.<br /><br /> “The priority at the moment is clean water, food relief, temporary shelter” said Alex Snary of the World Vision humanitarian aid organisation.<br /><br /> “These are the life sustaining elements that we need to get in place and we need to get them in a hurry.”<br /><br /> Saving lives is the aim. It is still unclear how many the cyclone claimed. The UN has revised its figure down to 11 but it is feared that could rise.<br /><br /> Among th