The Borneo Post

99 dead as Fuego threatens new eruptions

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ESCUINTLA, Guatemala: Explosions boomed from Guatemala’s fearsome Fuego volcano, unleashing fresh torrents of mud and ash down slopes, as the death toll from a previous eruption rose to at least 99.

Fears of a new blowup of the 3,763-metre volcano have stalked rescue workers since Sunday’s eruption buried entire villages on its southern flank.

The National Forensic Sciences Agency said in a report that morgues had received the remains of 99 people killed as a result of the eruption. Only 28 have been identified so far, it said.

“We already have data with names and locations where there are missing persons and that number is 192,” Sergio Cabanas, head of Guatemala’s disaster management agency, told reporters earlier in the day.

Experts warned that heavy rains in the area could provoke avalanches due to the large flows of volcanic mud, known as lahars, since the eruption on Sunday.

Volcanolog­ists recorded the volcano exploding several times an hour, which generated a fresh 4,700 metre high column of gray ash.

“The explosions are generating moderate avalanches that have an approximat­e distance of 800 to 1,000 metres,” the Volcanolog­y Institute said.

It said the lahars could sweep

We already have data with names and locations where there are missing persons and that number is 192.

down the mountain laden with concrete, rocks up to a metre in diametre and tree trunks.

“The activity continues and the possibilit­y of new pyroclasti­c f lows in the next hours or days cannot be ruled out, so it is recommende­d not to remain near the affected area,” it said.

Emergency workers had to temporaril­y suspend their search after a new eruption triggered a landslide. Hundreds of people were evacuated from seven communitie­s in the Escuintla area near the summit, as panicked locals rushed to their cars to escape, causing chaotic traffic.

An AFP photograph­er saw a large plume of ash rise into the sky, prompting an evacuation of everyone authoritie­s could find before the police, the military and rescuers were ordered to stand down.

Hundreds of rescue workers, including firefighte­rs, police and the military, were battling adverse conditions to search for remains in the tangled morass of rubble, dust and earth left behind by the landslides.

General Walter Sanchez, in charge of operations around the epicenter of the destructio­n near the village of El Rodeo, said the heat from the ash and hot sediment made rescue work difficult. Firefighte­rs hosed down their smoking boots, which had sunk into molten volcanic material just below the ash surface.

Everything in the search area was covered in a thick blanket of dust. In the murk created by the dust, police were using red ink to mark homes that had already been searched for bodies.

More than 12,000 people have been evacuated from their homes, the disaster management agency said, with over 3,000 of them housed in temporary shelters.

On the slopes, local volunteers distribute­d food to rescue workers, and columns of cars handed out food, water, toilet paper, diapers and other necessitie­s to residents. Some residents said they had organised themselves to prevent looting that they claimed occurred on the first night of the disaster.

The killer eruption was the Central American country’s strongest in four decades. It sent huge clouds of ash barreling over the surroundin­g area, blanketing roads, cars and people in thick gray dust as a river of molten mud

Sergio Cabanas, head of Guatemala’s disaster management agency

carved a path down the mountain, sweeping away entire villages.

Officials said the speed and ferocity of the eruption took mountain communitie­s by surprise, with many of the dead found in or around their homes.

Despite offers of internatio­nal help from the United States, Mexico and several Latin American neighbors, Guatemalan authoritie­s have not made a request for foreign aid.

The foreign ministry said disaster management agency CONRED would help determine any such request.

“We are ready when CONRED, as the governing body of emergency management, authorise us to make an appeal,” the ministry said in a statement.

President Jimmy Morales has been criticised on social media for passively waiting to react to offers of internatio­nal aid. The head of the Internatio­nal Red Cross Francesco Rocca is due to visit the country, the Genevabase­d agency said.

Meanwhile, the US Air Force was to ‘transport six Guatemalan children injured by the recent eruption’ for treatment in Texas, the American military said. — AFP

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 ??  ?? Volcanic rocks are seen around houses after the eruption of the Fuego volcano at El Rodeo in Escuintla, Guatemala.
Volcanic rocks are seen around houses after the eruption of the Fuego volcano at El Rodeo in Escuintla, Guatemala.
 ??  ?? Alejandro Esqueque, 45, finds remains as he looks for missing members of his family at his home, in an area affected by the eruption of the Fuego volcano. — Reuters photos
Alejandro Esqueque, 45, finds remains as he looks for missing members of his family at his home, in an area affected by the eruption of the Fuego volcano. — Reuters photos
 ??  ?? A combinatio­n photo of satellite imagery shows the before and after of lava flow associated with the eruption of the Feugo Volcano.
A combinatio­n photo of satellite imagery shows the before and after of lava flow associated with the eruption of the Feugo Volcano.

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