Chattanooga Times Free Press

Rescuers dig through volcanic ash after 14 die

- BY NINIEK KARMINI AND AGOES BASOEKI

LUMAJANG, Indonesia — Rescuers were sifting through smoldering debris and thick mud in search of survivors a day after the highest volcano on Java island erupted with fury, killing at least 14 people with searing gas and ash.

Mount Semeru in Lumajang district in East Java province spewed thick columns of ash more than 40,000 feet into the sky in a sudden eruption Saturday triggered by heavy rains. Villages and nearby towns were blanketed and several hamlets buried under tons of mud from volcanic debris.

Authoritie­s warned the thousands of people who fled the volcano’s wrath not to return during Sunday’s lull in activity. But some were desperate to check on livestock and possession­s left behind. In several areas, everything — from the thinnest tree branch to couches and chairs inside homes — was caked with ash.

“There’s no life there ... trees, farms, houses are scorched, everything is covered in heavy gray ash,” said Haryadi Purnomo of East Java’s search and rescue agency. He said that several other areas were virtually untouched.

Search and rescue efforts were temporary suspended Sunday afternoon because of fears that hot ash and debris could tumble down from the crater due to heavy rains. On Saturday, a torrent of mud destroyed the main bridge connecting Lumajang and the neighborin­g district of Malang, as well as a smaller bridge.

The eruption eased pressure that had been building under a lava dome perched on the crater. But experts warned that the dome could still

further collapse, causing an avalanche of the blistering gas and debris trapped beneath it.

A thundersto­rm and days of rain, which eroded and partly collapsed the dome atop the 12,060-foot Semeru, triggered the eruption, said Eko Budi Lelono, who heads the geological survey center.

Semeru, the stratovolc­ano in shape of a cone, is also known as Mahameru, meaning “The Great Mountain”

in Sanskrit. It has erupted many times over the past 200 years. Still, as with other volcanoes — it is one of 129 under watch in Indonesia, the

world’s largest archipelag­o — more than 62,000

people call Sumeru's fertile slopes home. It last erupted in January, with no casualties.

Indonesia, an archipelag­o of more than 270 million people, is prone to earthquake­s and volcanic activity because it sits along the Pacific “Ring of Fire,” a horseshoe-shaped series of fault lines. Currently 54% of the country’s population live on Java, the country’s most

densely populated area.

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