The Philippine Star

Residents given 48 hours to leave Taal danger zone

- By EMMANUEL TUPAS

Residents still within the 14-kilometer danger zone around Taal Volcano were ordered by the police yesterday to leave within 48 hours or they would be bodily carried out of the area.

Brig. Gen. Bernard Banac, spokesman for the Philippine National Police (PNP), said the ultimatum was issued before the area is placed on total lockdown due to the

“deteriorat­ing situation” in the permanent danger zone.

Banac told reporters that the ground in the danger areas identified by the National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council (NDRRMC) continued to swell. Twelve towns and two

cities were included in the danger zone due to their proximity to the volcano.

More than 235,000 people have been evacuated, comprising 98 percent of the population in the area.

Interior Secretary Eduardo Año said police officers and soldiers are looking for the remaining two percent of the population around the volcano who refused to heed government’s warning.

Residents who still refuse to leave will be forcibly evacuated, Banac said.

After the 48-hour ultimatum lapses today, Banac said the more than 500 police officers manning checkpoint­s within the danger zone would be pulled out and relocated outside the volcano’s radius.

They will be positioned in the risk control points beyond the circumfere­ntial line.

An official of the Department of the Interior and Local Government (DILG) said they would seek guidance from the NDRRMC regarding the order to shut down commercial establishm­ents in Tagaytay City.

DILG Undersecre­tary Epimaco Densing III said the order was issued by the department as the supervisin­g authority of local government units.

“We would elevate this to the higher level for them to decide whether or not to allow business establishm­ents in Tagaytay,” he said.

Explosive eruption still possible – Phivolcs

State volcanolog­ists continued to record fewer volcanic earthquake­s and smaller amount of sulfur dioxide at Taal Volcano in the past days, but they are not ruling out the probabilit­y of an explosive eruption “within hours or days” due to the presence of magma beneath the volcano.

“There is already magma beneath the volcano. We’re looking at how fast the magma could get to the surface (crater),” Science Undersecre­tary and Philippine Institute of Volcanolog­y and Seismology (Phivolcs) director Renato Solidum Jr. told radio dzMM.

The volcano remains at Alert Level 4 as of yesterday, meaning a hazardous explosive eruption can happen within hours or days.

For the past 24 hours, six volcanic earthquake­s were plotted by the Philippine Seismic Network (PSN), registerin­g magnitudes of 1.5 to 2.4.

However, the Taal Volcano Network, which can record small earthquake­s undetectab­le by the PSN, recorded 481 volcanic earthquake­s, including eight low frequency tremblers. The volcanic quakes have been linked to the movement of magma.

The amount of sulfur dioxide emitted by the volcano in the past 24 hours was 153 tons, lower than the normal level of 500 tons a day.

No ash emission was observed around Taal Volcano yesterday.

“However, unconsolid­ated ash blanketing the volcano has been remobilize­d and transporte­d by strong low-level winds toward southwest, affecting towns of Lemery and Agoncillo,” Phivolcs said in an advisory.

It said several airlines reported that “remobilize­d” volcanic ash reached a height of approximat­ely 5,800 meters or 19,000 feet.

Mariton Bornas, chief of the Phivolcs Volcano Monitoring and Eruption Prediction Division, said people living near the volcano should not be complacent despite the significan­t decline in Taal’s activity.

She said the lower sulfur dioxide might also mean that the vents are temporaril­y blocked.

If the lower parameters continue for two weeks, Bornas said the agency may lower Taal’s alert status from 4 to 3.

“But not all can return to their homes. We will not recommend that,” Bornas said.

Phivolcs has recommende­d the permanent relocation of people living on volcano island, which is identified as a permanent danger zone. Around 6,000 to 10,000 people reside on the island. – With Helen Flores, Jose Rodel Clapano

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