The Morning Call

Blast rocks St. Vincent as volcano erupts again

- By Kristin Deane and Danica Coto

KINGSTOWN, St. Vincent — La Soufriere volcano fired an enormous amount of ash and hot gas early Monday in the biggest explosive eruption yet since volcanic activity began on the eastern Caribbean island of St. Vincent late last week, with officials worried about the lives of those who have refused to evacuate.

Experts called it a “huge explosion” that generated pyroclasti­c flows down the volcano’s south and southwest flanks.

“It’s destroying everything in its path,” Erouscilla Joseph, director of the University of the West Indies’ Seismic Research Center, told Associated Press. “Anybody who would have not heeded the evacuation, they need to get out immediatel­y.”

There were no immediate reports of injuries or deaths, but government officials were scrambling to respond to the latest eruption, bigger than the first one that occurred Friday morning.

Roughly 16,000 people who live in communitie­s close to the volcano had been evacuated under government orders Thursday, but an unknown number have refused to leave.

Richard Robertson, with the seismic research center, told local station NBC Radio that the volcano’s old and new dome have been destroyed and that a new crater has been created. He said that the pyroclasti­c flows would have razed everything in their way.

“Anything that was there, man, animal, anything ... they are gone,” he said. “And it’s a terrible thing to say it.”

Joseph said the latest explosion is equivalent to the one that occurred in 1902 and killed some 1,600. The volcano last erupted in 1979. Ash from the explosions has fallen on Barbados and other nearby islands.

 ?? SAMUEL/AP ORVIL ?? Police on Monday patrol a road to stop people from getting close to the active La Soufriere volcano.
SAMUEL/AP ORVIL Police on Monday patrol a road to stop people from getting close to the active La Soufriere volcano.

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