Philippine Daily Inquirer

THOUSANDS FLEE ANGRY VOLCANO ON SPANISH ISLE

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LA PALMA, SPAIN—Authoritie­s have evacuated about 5,000 people from villages in the Spanish Canary Island of La Palma as lava spews from an erupting volcano, local officials said.

The 15-meter high lava flow has already swallowed 20 houses in the village of El Paso and sections of roads, Mayor Sergio Rodriguez told TVE radio station on Monday morning.

It is now spreading through the neighborin­g village of Los Llanos de Aridane, where hundreds of houses are at risk, he said. “We are monitoring the trajectory of the lava,” Rodriguez said.

Since erupting on Sunday afternoon, the volcano has shot lava up hundreds of meters into the air and poured flows of molten rock toward the Atlantic Ocean over a sparsely populated area of La Palma, the most northweste­rn island in the Canaries archipelag­o.

Local authoritie­s have evacuated 5,000 people from four villages and no further evacuation are likely to be necessary, Canary Islands regional president Angel Victor Torres said on Monday morning.

Reckless behavior

“The lava is moving toward the coast and the damage will be material. According to experts there are about 17 to 20 million cubic meters of lava,” he said.

No fatalities were reported and none are likely to happen so long as no one behaves recklessly, volcanolog­ist Nemesio Perez said on Monday.

La Palma had been on high alert after more than 22,000 tremors were reported in the space of a week in Cumbre Vieja, which belongs to a chain of volcanoes that last had a major eruption in 1971 and is one of the most active volcanic regions in the Canaries.

In 1971, one man was killed as he was taking photograph­s near the lava flows, but no property was damaged.

Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez arrived in La Palma on Sunday night for talks with the islands’ government on managing the eruption.

“We have all the resources and all the troops, citizens can rest easy,” he said.

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