Albuquerque Journal

57,000 flee likely Bali volcano eruption

Officials: 560 quakes recorded on Monday

- BY FIRDIA LISNAWATI ASSOCIATED PRESS

BALI, Indonesia — More than 57,000 people have fled the area around Mount Agung volcano on the Indonesian island of Bali, fearing an imminent eruption, officials said Tuesday.

An increasing frequency of tremors from the volcano indicates magma is continuing to move toward the surface and an eruption is possible, said National Disaster Mitigation agency spokesman Sutopo Purwo Nugroho. He said more than 560 volcanic earthquake­s were recorded Monday, most of them shallow.

The alert status of Agung was raised to the highest level Friday after a dramatic increase in seismic activity. It last erupted in 1963, killing about 1,100 people.

Another disaster agency official, Waskita Sutadewa in Bali, said people have scattered and some have crossed to the neighborin­g island of Lombok. The evacuees are living in temporary shelters, sports centers, village halls and with relatives or friends. Some return to the danger zone, which extends up to 7.5 miles from the crater, during the day to tend to livestock.

Officials have said there’s no immediate threat to tourists, but some are already cutting short their stays in Bali. A significan­t eruption would force the closure of Bali’s internatio­nal airport, stranding thousands.

“It’s obviously an awful thing. We want to get out of here just to be safe,” said an Australian woman at Bali’s airport.

Nugroho said hundreds of thousands of face masks will be distribute­d in Bali as part of government humanitari­an assistance that includes thousands of mattresses and blankets.

“The chances of an eruption are very high, but we cannot be sure when it will erupt,” he said at a news conference in the capital, Jakarta.

He said not everyone had left the danger zone because they didn’t want to leave livestock, were underestim­ating the risk or because of religious reasons.

“Officers continue to sweep the area and are appealing for people to evacuate,” he said.

In 1963, Agung hurled ash as high as 12 miles and remained active for about a year. Lava traveled 4.7 miles and ash reached Jakarta, about 620 miles away.

The mountain, 45 miles northeast of the tourist hot spot of Kuta, is among more than 120 active volcanoes in Indonesia.

The country of thousands of islands is prone to seismic upheaval due to its location on the Pacific “Ring of Fire,” an arc of volcanoes and fault lines encircling the Pacific Basin.

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