Airport closure and flights chaos following Bali volcano eruptions
● Mount Agung activity causes ash clouds to gather and dust to fall
A volcano on the Indonesian island of Bali has rumbled to life with eruptions that dusted nearby resorts and villages with ash and forced the closure of the small international airport on neighbouring Lombok island as towering grey plumes drifted east.
Mount Agung erupted on Saturday evening and three times early on Sunday, lighting its cone with an orange glow and sending ash 13,000 feet into the atmosphere. It is still gushing and the ash clouds have forced the closure of Lombok island’s airport until at least 6am today, an official at the airport said.
Most scheduled domestic and international flights were continuing yesterday at Bali’s busy airport after a rash of cancellations on Saturday evening.
Disaster officials said ash up to half a centimetre thick settled on villages around the volcano and soldiers and police had distributed masks.
Authorities warned anyone still in the exclusion zone around the volcano, which extends 7.5 kilometres from the crater in places, to leave.
Made Sugiri, an employee at Mahagiri Panoramic Resort, located around 10 kilometres from the crater, said a thin layer of volcanic ash reached the area.
“We are out of the danger zone, but like other resorts in the region, of course the eruptions cause a decrease in the number of visitors,” he said.
“I think these latest eruptions are more dangerous, given the thick clouds it’s releasing,” he said.
“Certainly we worry, but we have to wait and see.
“Hopefully there is no significant eruption.”
Government volcanologist Gede Suantika said a red-yellow light visible in ash above the mountain was the reflection of lava in the crater.
Suantika said Agung could spew ash for at least a month but did not expect a major eruption.
Bali is Indonesia’s top tourist destination, with its Hindu culture, surf beaches and lush green interior attracting about five million visitors a year.
Nearby Lombok is relatively undeveloped as a tourist destination, receiving fewer than 100,000 international visitors a year.
Australian airline Jetstar, which cancelled nine flights to and from Bali on Saturday evening, said most of its flights would operate normally yeshere terday after its senior pilots assessed it was safe to fly.
However, it warned that the movement of ash cloud is highly unpredictable and that flights could still be cancelled at short notice.
Virgin, KLM and Airasia Malaysia also cancelled several flights on Saturday and Airasia cancelled more than 30 flights yesterday.
Several thousand people were affected by Saturday’s flight cancellations.
“We weren’t notified by Jetstar in advance of us getting (to Bali’s airport),” said Australian tourist George Bennick.
“So we are very disappointed about that.”
Agung also had a minor eruption on Tuesday, but authorities have not raised its alert status from the secondhighest level, which would widen the exclusion area and prompt a large evacuation of people.
About 25,000 people have been unable to return to their homes since September, when Agung showed signs of activity for the first time in more than half a century.
The volcano’s last major eruption, in 1963, killed about 1,100 people.
Indonesia sits on the ‘Pacific Ring of Fire’ and has more than 120 active volcanoes.
Mount Agung’s alert status was raised to the highest level in September following a dramatic increase in tremors from the volcano, which doubled the exclusion zone around the crater and prompted more than 140,000 people to leave the area. The alert was lowered on 29 October after a decrease in activity.