Weekend Herald

Residents on alert for bigger events as lava cuts through forest and roads

- Caleb Jones in Honolulu The Pianist.

Nearly 1500 residents were ordered to evacuate from their volcano-side homes after Hawaii’s Kilauea Volcano erupted, sending molten lava to chew its way through forest land and bubble up on paved streets.

Volcano officials couldn’t predict how long yesterday’s eruption may last, prompting Hawaii’s Governor to activate the National Guard to help with evacuation­s and provide security to about 770 structures left empty when residents sought shelter.

There were no immediate reports of injuries.

Hawaii County officials said steam and lava poured out of a crack in Leilani Estates, which is near the town of Pahoa on the Big Island.

Footage on local television showed lava spurting into the sky from a crack in a road. Aerial drone footage showed a line of lava snaking through a forest.

Resident Jeremiah Osuna captured drone footage of the lava burning through the trees, a scene he described as a “curtain of fire”. “It sounded like if you were to put a bunch of rocks into a dryer and turn it on as high as you could. You could just smell sulfur and burning trees and underbrush and stuff,” he told Honolulu television station KHON.

Asta Miklius, a geophysici­st with the USGS Hawaiian Volcanoes Observator­y, said there is no way to know exactly how long the eruption will continue.

“One of the parameters is going to be whether the summit magma reservoir starts to drain in response to this event, and that has not happened yet,” Miklius said. “There is quite a bit of magma in the system. It won’t be just an hours-long eruption probably, but how long it will last will depend on Asta Miklius, a geophysici­st with the USGS Hawaiian Volcanoes Observator­y, said there is no way to know exactly how long the eruption will continue. whether the summit magma reservoir gets involved. And so we are watching that very, very closely.”

County, state and federal officials had been warning residents all week that they should be prepared to evacuate, as an eruption would give little warning. Officials at the US Geological Survey yesterday raised the volcano’s alert level to warning status, the highest possible, meaning a hazardous eruption is imminent, under way or suspected.

Nearby community centres have opened for shelter.

The US Geological Survey said new ground cracks were reported yesterday. Hot vapour emerged from a crack and spattering lava began to erupt.

Scientists said areas downslope of the erupting vent were at risk of being covered by lava.

Leilani Estates appeared to be at greatest risk, but scientists said new vents and outbreaks could occur and it’s not possible to say where.

The eruption comes after days of earthquake­s rattled the area’s Puna district.

A nearby school was closed due to the ongoing seismic activity and several roadways cracked under the strain of the constant temblors. A magnitude 5 earthquake was recorded hours before the eruption began yesterday.

The Puu Oo crater floor began to collapse on Tuesday, triggering a series of earthquake­s and pushing the lava into new undergroun­d chambers. The collapse caused magma to push more than 16km downslope toward the populated southeast coastline of the island.

Most of Kilauea’s activity has been nonexplosi­ve, but a 1924 eruption spewed ash and nine-tonne rocks into the sky, leaving one man dead.

Puu Oo’s 1983 eruption resulted in lava fountains soaring more than 450m high. In the decades since, the lava flow has buried dozens of square kilometres of land and destroyed many homes. AP Academy expels Cosby, Polanski The organisati­on that bestows the Academy Awards said yesterday that it has expelled two prominent members convicted of sexual offences, Bill Cosby and Roman Polanski, from its membership. It’s the first major decision since the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences implemente­d revised standards of conduct for its 8400 members following its expulsion of disgraced mogul Harvey Weinstein in October. In Polanski’s case, the expulsion comes more than 40 years after he was accused of raping a 13-year-old girl he plied with champagne and Quaaludes during a photo shoot, and 15 years after he won a best director Oscar for Polanski’s lawyer Harland Braun said the decision “blindsided” the director, who learned of his expulsion from media reports. Braun accused the academy of failing to follow its rules and give Polanski’s team a chance to respond to efforts to expel him. He said he and Polanski’s agent will ask for the director to be reinstated next week and they want a hearing before a new vote on his membership is taken. Cosby was convicted last week of sexual assault in Pennsylvan­ia, for drugging and molesting Temple University employee Andrea Constand at his suburban Philadelph­ia mansion 14 years ago. A spokesman for Cosby did not return a message seeking comment yesterday.

The Swedish Academy says the Nobel Prize in literature will be not awarded this year following sex-abuse allegation­s and other issues within its ranks that have tarnished the body’s reputation. The academy said yesterday that the 2018 prize will be given in 2019. The decision was made at a weekly meeting in Stockholm on the grounds that the academy is in no shape to pick a winner after a string of sex abuse allegation­s and financial crimes scandals. In a statement, the academy said the decision “was arrived at in view of the currently diminished Academy and the reduced public confidence in the Academy”. It will be the first time since 1949 that the prestigiou­s award is not handed out.

A landslide of a mound of mining waste has killed at least 14 people in northern Burma’s jade mining region. An official in Kachin state’s Hpakant township says the accident also left six people injured and an unknown number missing. A search was continuing. Hpakant, 950km north of Burma’s biggest city, Rangoon, is the epicentre of the world’s biggest and most lucrative jade mining industry. Jade is normally mined by heavy equipment that generates huge mounds of waste soil, which easily causes landslides. People often settle near the mounds to scavenge for jade in the precarious­ly high piles of waste. Fatal accidents are not rare and more than 100 people were killed in a single landslide in November 2015.

Six people drowned in Kenya in flooding yesterday and 11 others were missing, local authoritie­s said, the latest of dozens of deaths caused by heavy seasonal rains in recent weeks. The United Nations humanitari­an agency said in a statement that at least 80 people have been killed and 244,000 people displaced from their homes by the heavy rains since March, the majority of them in Tana River, Kilifi and Mandera counties.

 ?? US forces participat­ing in a joint exercise in the Pacific. ?? has overtaken Russia, where military spending fell by 20% in 2017, its first cut in real terms since 1998.defence spending rose by 5.5% in 2017, passing France to join world’s top five military spenders. Nobel Prize delay over scandal Landslide kills 14 Six die in flooding
US forces participat­ing in a joint exercise in the Pacific. has overtaken Russia, where military spending fell by 20% in 2017, its first cut in real terms since 1998.defence spending rose by 5.5% in 2017, passing France to join world’s top five military spenders. Nobel Prize delay over scandal Landslide kills 14 Six die in flooding
 ?? Picture / AP ??
Picture / AP

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