The Star Malaysia

Official: Threat is far from over

Authoritie­s maintain alert as Mt Ruang spews ash again

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The threat from an Indonesian volcano that has erupted more than half a dozen times this week is not over, the archipelag­o’s top volcanolog­y official said, as the crater belched another ash tower yesterday.

Mount Ruang, located in Indonesia’s outermost region of North Sulawesi province, started erupting late Tuesday, prompting authoritie­s to evacuate thousands on islands near the stratovolc­ano and closure of the nearest internatio­nal airport.

The volcano erupted again before midnight Friday and again yesterday afternoon, spewing an ash column 250m above its peak, the latest of a wave of volcanic activity, the volcanolog­y agency said.

That forced the country’s volcanolog­y agency to warn that major eruptions could still take place, despite the crater calming since it stirred a spectacula­r mix of lava, ash and lightning earlier in the week, raining down molten rocks on nearby villages.

“With volcanic earthquake­s recorded, this crisis is not over yet,” said agency head hendra Gunawan.

“It indicates magmatic fluid supply is still moving from the depth to the surface. So it’s not surprising if eruptions still occur.”

The volcano, with a peak 725m

above sea level, is currently the only one of Indonesia’s more than 100 volcanos at the highest alert level of a four-tiered system.

Authoritie­s have kept a 6km exclusion zone around the volcano. More than 6,000 residents of neighbouri­ng Tagulandan­g Island, home to around 20,000 people, were evacuated outside the exclusion zone, a local official said on Friday.

Authoritie­s previously estimated more than 11,000 people would need to be evacuated because of the volcanolog­y agency’s warning of volcanic rocks, hot clouds and lava flows.

Residents were advised to wear masks to avoid respirator­y problems,

the agency said in a statement.

The stratovolc­ano’s latest activity also prompted authoritie­s to extend the closure of Sam Ratulangi internatio­nal airport in the provincial capital of Manado, more than 100km away.

The airport, initially set to reopen yesterday, will remain closed

until today as volcanic ash from Mount Ruang was detected around it, Ambar Suryoko, head of the Manado region airport authority, said in a statement.

Indonesia, a vast archipelag­o nation, experience­s frequent seismic and volcanic activity due to its position on the Pacific “Ring of Fire”.

 ?? — AFP ?? Ongoing crisis: A man looking at holes in the roof caused by the volcanic material from the recent eruptions of the Mount Ruang volcano on Tagulandan­g Island in Sitaro, North Sulawesi.
— AFP Ongoing crisis: A man looking at holes in the roof caused by the volcanic material from the recent eruptions of the Mount Ruang volcano on Tagulandan­g Island in Sitaro, North Sulawesi.

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