The Phnom Penh Post

Volcano in Indonesia spews ash 3000m high

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THE offspring of Indonesia’s infamous Krakatoa volcano erupted on Sunday, spewing a towering volcanic ash cloud some 3,000m into the sky.

Mount Anak Krakatoa, which means Child of Krakatoa, belched thick ash over the strait that separates the islands of Java and Sumatra forcing authoritie­s to warn nearby residents to wear masks outside.

“We are still recording continuous eruptions with thick clouds towering at between 500 and 3,000m from the peak,” Deny Mardiono of Indonesia’s Geological Agency told AFP.

Anak Krakatoa has erupted at least 21 times in recent weeks but Sunday’s eruption was the largest yet, Mardiono said.

Authoritie­s ordered people to stay out of a 2km exclusion zone around the volcano, which is currently graded at level two of Indonesia’s four-tiered volcanic alert system.

“People, including tourists, should adhere to the recommenda­tion from the Geological Agency, which prohibits anyone to be within a 2km radius from the crater,” he added.

The volcano has been sporadical­ly active since it emerged from the sea at the beginning of last century in the caldera formed after the 1883 eruption of Mount Krakatoa.

That disaster was one of the deadliest and most destructiv­e in history with an estimated 35,000 people killed.

Anak Krakatoa last erupted in 2018, generating a tsunami that killed 429 people and left thousands homeless.

Indonesia, a Southeast Asian archipelag­o nation, sits on the Pacific Ring of Fire where the meeting of continenta­l plates causes high volcanic and seismic activity. The country has nearly 130 active volcanoes.

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