The Borneo Post (Sabah)

BBC team among ten injured in Etna volcano drama

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ROME: Ten people were injured by flying rock and lava after Mount Etna, Europe’s biggest active volcano, burst into life on Thursday, according to a BBC journalist and others caught up in a terrifying drama on the upper slopes.

The 10 suffered minor burns, cuts and bruises and six were hospitalis­ed.

German volcanolog­ist Boris Behncke described on his Facebook page how the explosion was triggered by a build-up of steam after molten lava overran a layer of snow.

“I received a bruise on the head but I am fine,” said the Etna specialist.

The explosion occurred at 12.43pm (1143 GMT) when the steam trapped between the lava and the surface of the mountain escaped in a powerful burst, Stefano Branca, of the Italian institute of geology and volcanolog­y (INGV), told AFP.

Everyone taken off the mountain – rescue team and guides here were brilliant. BBC team all ok – some cuts/ bruises and burns. Very shaken though – it was extremely scary. Rebecca Morelle, BBC science correspond­ent

There were around 35 people in the area close to the explosion, including a BBC team, 15 tourists, scientists and guides, said Nino Borzi, mayor of Nicolosi, the closest residentia­l area. “There were 10 injuries but none serious,” he said.

BBC science correspond­ent Rebecca Morelle tweeted that it could easily have been much worse.

“Everyone taken off the mountain – rescue team and guides here were brilliant,” she wrote on Twitter, adding: “BBC team all ok – some cuts/ bruises and burns. Very shaken though – it was extremely scary.”

Morelle said a volcanolog­ist with them on the peak described the incident as the most dangerous in his 30-year career.

“Explosions like this have killed,” she added.

“Running down a mountain pelted by rocks, dodging burning boulders and boiling steam - not an experience I ever ever want to repeat.”

The incident happened as Etna burst into life again, two and a half weeks after its first eruption in over a year.

The eruption, from a crater on the southeaste­rn side of the 3,000-metre (9,800-foot) peak, sent rocks and molten lava some 200 metres into the sky above Sicily.

 ?? — Reuters photo ?? File photo showss Mount Etna spewing lava as it erupts on the southern island of Sicily, Italy.
— Reuters photo File photo showss Mount Etna spewing lava as it erupts on the southern island of Sicily, Italy.

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