The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Evacuees allowed to return home as Mount Agung alert level lowered

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JAKARTA: Thousands of people who were forced to evacuate their houses on the Indonesian island of Bali because of a rumbling volcano can now return home, authoritie­s said yesterday as they lowered Mount Agung’s alert level.

The volcano, located about 75 kilometres from the tourist hub in Kuta, has been periodical­ly spewing molten clouds of ash and smoke for months, forcing more than 100,000 people to flee the area and prompting the closure of the island’s internatio­nal airport.

But on Saturday, Indonesia’s volcanolog­y centre lowered Agung’s alert level from four to three, citing a decline in its activity.

“The volcanic earthquake­s are now... declining significan­tly.

“The deformatio­n is deflating and getting more stable and the concentrat­ion of the volcanic gas spewing into the air is also declining,” the centre’s senior volcanolog­ist Gede Suantika told AFP.

Under the new alert level, the no-entry zone has been reduced to four kilometres from Agung’s peak, an area with no residents, allowing all evacuees to return home, authoritie­s said.

“The public activities as well as the tourism in Bali have been declared safe, there is no more disturbanc­e from Mount Agung’s activities,” Indonesia’s energy minister Ignasius Jonan said in a statement.

Agung rumbled back to life last September. The volcano’s activity slowed down in late October, before the eruption threat reared its head again in November, sparking travel chaos and pounding Bali’s lucrative tourism industry and its wider economy.

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