Philippine Daily Inquirer

MAYON DANGER ZONE WIDENED TO 8-KM RADIUS

- By Mar S. Arguelles, Ma. April Mier, Michael B. Jaucian and Rey Anthony Ostria @InquirerSL­B

LEGAZPI CITY— Disaster officials on Tuesday declared “no man’s land” in areas within the 8-kilometer radius extended danger zone (EDZ) as ash from Mt. Mayon continued to fall on towns and cities in Albay province.

This would prohibit villagers from returning to their farms there, according to the Albay Public Safety Emergency and Management Office (Apsemo).

The Apsemo chief, Cedric Daep, said the declaratio­n of no man’s land was a standard practice during past eruptions of Mayon. Police in the 6-km permanent danger zone (PDZ) would man checkpoint­s to prevent villagers from returning to their homes and farms.

Evacuees

Evacuees are known to return to their homes and farms within the PDZ to look after their animals and crops.

Daep said the new directive would cover at least 35 villages in the towns of Daraga, Camalig, Guinobatan, Malilipot and Santo Domingo, and in the cities of Legazpi and Ligao.

A total of 9,906 families or 39,250 people are staying in 35 evacuation centers in the province.

The number is expected to surge following the mandatory evacuation of villagers near the 8-km EDZ and the preemptive evacuation of residents within the 9-km preemptive EDZ in preparatio­n for Mayon’s fullblown eruption that could happen anytime.

On Monday, the Philippine Institute of Volcanolog­y and Seismology (Phivolcs) raised Alert Level 4 (hazardous eruption imminent) after Mayon spewed two successive cauliflowe­r-type ash columns, dumping heavy ashfall on Camalig, Guinobatan, Ligao and other areas in Albay’s third district.

Like thunder

The ash columns were followed by pyroclasti­c clouds, and lava fountainin­g and flows.

From Monday night until Tuesday morning, residents of places as far as Legazpi heard Mayon’s rumblings, which many likened to the sound of bass drums or rolling boulders.

Residents who were closer to the volcano said it sounded like thunder, only three times louder and more deafening.

Motorists on the national highway that connects Albay to Camarines Sur province reported minimal to zero visibility due to the thick ash.

Eruptions on Monday and Tuesday, which ejected a 5-kmhigh ash column, were just “starters” for sustained fullblown eruptions in the coming days, said Eduardo Laguerta, Phivolcs resident volcanolog­ist.

Paul Alanis, Phivolcs science and research specialist, said the eruptions had only sent ash clouds 5 km high, not 10 km as earlier reported.

Ash plume

“We overestima­ted the height of the ash plume,” Alanis said.

The 2,463-meter volcano has had eruptions described as phreatomag­matic (magma and water driven) types since Monday, four lava fountainin­gs as high as 500-700 meters above the summit and lava flows that cascaded down to the 6-km PDZ.

Due to Mayon’s unrest, Daraga canceled this year’s Cagsawa Festival, previously scheduled for the whole month of February.

Albay Gov. Al Francis Bichara ordered the suspension of work in Guinobatan and Ligao, which were affected by heavy ashfall.

Classes at all levels in Daraga, Camalig, Guinobatan, Ligao and Legazpi were suspended earlier.

As of noon Tuesday, ashfall had affected 178 villages, mostly in towns in the fifth district of Camarines Sur, northwest of Mayon.

 ?? —GEORGE GIO BRONDIAL ?? FIERY SHOW A clear night sky in Albay province provides a perfect backdrop for Mt. Mayon’s fiery spectacle. The volcano continues to spew ash and lava in this photo taken from the village of Bigaa in Legazpi City at 9:43 p.m. on Monday.
—GEORGE GIO BRONDIAL FIERY SHOW A clear night sky in Albay province provides a perfect backdrop for Mt. Mayon’s fiery spectacle. The volcano continues to spew ash and lava in this photo taken from the village of Bigaa in Legazpi City at 9:43 p.m. on Monday.
 ?? —MARCALVIC ESPLANA ?? CROWDED People fleeing Mayon volcano’s fury find temporary shelter at Guinobatan East Central School in Guinobatan, Albay.
—MARCALVIC ESPLANA CROWDED People fleeing Mayon volcano’s fury find temporary shelter at Guinobatan East Central School in Guinobatan, Albay.

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