Global Times

REFUSING TO LEAVE

Residents living in the shadows of Bali’s bubbling volcano cannot afford to flee

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Thousands of villagers living in the shadow of a rumbling Bali volcano have been fleeing over recent days, but some are now risking life and limb by sneaking back into the danger zone – along with thrill-seeking tourists.

The 10-kilometer radius around Mount Agung is littered with roadside signs that read “Volcanic danger zone. No entry!”, underscori­ng the potential risks.

But for chicken farmer Wayan Kompyang, a father of nine, heading into the no-go area was no choice at all – his livelihood depends on it.

“I keep coming back to the village to check on my chickens and feed them,” he told AFP in Pring Sari, a tiny community less than eight kilometers from the belching crater.

The 45-year-old’s prized poultry isn’t for eating though – the chickens are used in Sabung, a traditiona­l rooster fighting contest in which villagers bet on the outcome.

There hasn’t been much chicken fighting since the volcano burst to life again in the past week. But with his family safe in an evacuation center, Kompyang is now afraid of losing his only source of income.

“I have to keep taking care of them to make sure they are healthy and ready to fight after this situation calms down,” he added.

‘Don’t challenge nature’

The crater is about 75 kilometers from the beachside tourist hub of Kuta, so there is relatively little risk to most of the 120,000 tourists stranded by a nearly three-day airport shutdown earlier this week.

But the dangers are real for tens of thousands who have already fled from homes around the volcano – which last erupted in 1963, killing around 1,600 people.

As many as 100,000 will likely be forced to leave their homes in case of another full eruption, disaster agency officials have said.

Adding to local officials’ headaches are foreign “eruption chasers,” who are sneaking into the red zone to get close to the burbling mountain.

“We just wanna see it,” said French tourist Anna Mangler, who was on a motorbike with her German companion when police stopped them from entering the restricted area.

“We are here for vacation... so why not? Of course it is scary, but it’s gonna be okay,” she told AFP.

Sutopo Purwo Nugroho, a spokesman for Indonesia’s disaster mitigation agency, has urged tourists to reconsider.

“We’re asking foreign tourists trespassin­g into the exclusion zone to please don’t do it,” he said.

“Yesterday, rocks were falling up to four kilometers away from the crater so it’s really dangerous... Don’t challenge nature.”

The local government has set up a livestock rescue taskforce to rush thousands of at-risk animals to safety, with some 8,200 pigs, cows and goats so far cleared from the area.

The slopes of Agung are a hub for cattle farming in the region, providing an important source of income for local communitie­s.

But the mountain is also an important spiritual center for many of Bali’s mostly Hindu population.

“I admit we’re having difficulti­es in evacuating people,” Nugroho said.

“Some people think a Mount Agung eruption is a spiritual event and want to leave their fate and safety in God’s hands.”

“There are also elderly people who have surrendere­d completely to nature and refused to leave.”

‘I will run’

Octogenari­an Hindu cleric Jero Mangku Darma – who witnessed the 1963 eruption – said he is the lone holdout in Sebudi, a small community about five kilometers from Agung.

“I don’t want to be evacuated. Why should I?” asked Darma, dressed in a traditiona­l Balinese sarong, as the overwhelmi­ng smell of sulfur from the volcano filled the air.

“I will stay here. Unless the volcano really erupts, then I will run.”

Hundreds of people who snuck back to their villages died in a 2010 eruption at Java’s Mount Merapi – one of the world’s most active and dangerous volcanoes.

But with no work and running low on cash, Wayan Sinta Presana said he would take his chances after returning from an evacuation center.

“There haven’t been any constructi­on jobs at all for five days,” said the 49-year-old, whose home in Pakraman Presana village sits near the mountain.

“We have been spending money on food but I don’t have any new income. It’s very stressful. At home, at least I can relieve the anxiety by looking after my birds.”

 ?? Photos: CFP ?? A local girl stands before Mount Agung in Karangasem on Indonesia’s resort island of Bali on Thursday. Inset: Local children play with a ball before Mount Agung while thousands of foreign tourists were expected to leave Bali by plane on Thursday.
Photos: CFP A local girl stands before Mount Agung in Karangasem on Indonesia’s resort island of Bali on Thursday. Inset: Local children play with a ball before Mount Agung while thousands of foreign tourists were expected to leave Bali by plane on Thursday.

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