Sun.Star Cebu

Glowing-red lava prompts more to flee

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Glowing-red lava spurted in a fountain and flowed down the Philippine­s’ most active volcano on Tuesday in a stunning display of its fury that has sent more than 34,000 villagers fleeing to safety and prompted police to set up checkpoint­s to stop tourists from getting too close.

The Philippine Institute of Volcanolog­y and Seismology said the lava flowed as much as 2 kilometers from the often cloud-shrouded crater of Mayon, while ash fell on several villages in northeaste­rn Albay province.

Officials strongly advised people not to venture into a danger zone about 6 to 7 kilometers (3.7 to 4.3 miles) around Mayon, including residents who want to check their homes, farms and animals, and tourists seeking a closer view.

“They say it’s beauty juxta- posed with danger,” Office of Civil Defense regional director Claudio Yucot said.

At least 34,038 people have been displaced by Mayon’s eruption since the weekend from two cities and six towns, many of whom took shelter in schools turned into evacuation centers, Jukes Nunez, an Albay provincial disaster response officer, said by telephone. Others took refuge in the homes of relatives.

Albay officials declared a state of calamity in the province of more than a million people to allow more rapid disburseme­nt of disaster funds, Nunez said.

“We have witnessed lava fountainin­g yesterday, that’s why we have additional families who evacuated due to the threat,” said Romina Marasigan, spokeswoma­n of the government’s main disaster-response agency.

Renato Solidum, who heads the volcanolog­y institute, said the flows cascading down the volcano were not generated by an explosion from the crater with superheate­d lava, molten rocks and steam, but were caused by lava fragments breaking off from the lava flow and crashing on the lower slopes.

Scientists have not yet detected enough volcanic earthquake­s of the type that would prompt them to raise the alert level to four on a scale of five, which would indicate an explosive eruption may be imminent, Solidum said. Emergency response officials previously said they may have to undertake forced evacuation­s if the alert is raised to four.

To discourage villagers who insist on returning to the danger zones to check on their farm animals, officials planned to set up evacuation areas for animals, including water buffaloes, cows, pigs and poultry, Yucot said.

Temporary school sites were also being considered to ease the disruption to education after school buildings were turned into emergency shelters, he said.

Mayon is in Albay, about 340 kilometers southeast of Manila.

With its near-perfect cone, it is popular with climbers and tourists but has erupted about 50 times in the last 500 years, sometimes violently.

Mayon’s first recorded eruption was in 1616 and the most destructiv­e, in 1814, killed 1,200 people and buried the town of Cagsawa in volcanic mud.

 ?? AP FOTO ?? ERUPTION. Lava cascades down the slopes of Mayon volcano as seen from Legazpi City, Albay. More than 9,000 people have evacuated from the area around the volcano.
AP FOTO ERUPTION. Lava cascades down the slopes of Mayon volcano as seen from Legazpi City, Albay. More than 9,000 people have evacuated from the area around the volcano.

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