Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Indonesia volcano erupts, kills at least 14

- By Binsar Bakkara

MOUNT SINABUNG, Indonesia — An Indonesian volcano that has been rumbling for months unleashed a major eruption Saturday, killing 14 people just a day after authoritie­s allowed thousands of villagers who had been evacuated to return to its slopes, saying that activity was decreasing, officials said.

The search for victims was expected to resume today.

Among the dead on Mount Sinabung were a local television journalist and four high-school students and their teacher who were visiting the mountain to see the eruptions up close, a National Disaster Mitigation Agency spokesman, Sutopo Purwo Nugroho, said. At least three other people were injured, and authoritie­s feared the death toll would rise.

Sinabung, in western Sumatra Island, has been erupting for four months, sending lava and searing gas and rocks rolling down its southern slopes. Authoritie­s had evacuated more than 30,000 people, housing them in cramped tents, schools and public buildings. Many have been desperate to return to check on homes and farms, presenting a dilemma for the government.

On Friday, authoritie­s allowed nearly 14,000 people living outside a 3-mile danger zone to return home after volcanic activity decreased. Others living close to the peak have been returning to their homes over the past four months despite the dangers.

On Saturday, a series of huge blasts and eruptions thundered from the 8,530-foot-high volcano, sending lava and pyroclasti­c flows up to 2.8 miles away, Mr. Nugroho said. Television footage showed villages, farms and trees around the volcano covered in thick gray ash.

Following the eruption, all those who had been allowed to return home Friday were ordered back into evacuation centers.

“The death toll is likely to rise as many people are reported still missing and the darkness hampered our rescue efforts,” said Lt. Col. Asep Sukarna, who led the operation to retrieve the charred corpses some 2 miles from the volcano’s peak.

Indonesia is prone to seismic upheaval due to its location on the Pacific “Ring of Fire,” an arc of volcanoes and fault lines encircling the Pacific Basin. Mount Sinabung is among about 130 active volcanoes in Indonesia and has sporadical­ly erupted since September.

In 2010, 324 people killed over two months when Indonesia’s most volatile volcano, Mount Merapi, roared into life. As now in Sinabung, authoritie­s struggled to keep people away from the mountain. Scientists monitor Merapi, Sinabung and other Indonesian volcanos nonstop, but predicting their activity with any accuracy is all but impossible.

The latest eruptions came just a week after President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono visited displaced villagers in Sinabung and pledged to relocate them away from the mountain. Villagers are attracted to the slopes of volcanoes because the eruptions make for fertile soil.

Sinabung’s last major eruption was in August 2010, when it killed two people. Prior to that it had been quite for four centuries.

 ?? Sutanta Aditya/Getty Images ?? A resident runs to escape a cloud of hot volcanic ash that engulfed several villages in the Karo district of Indonesia during the eruption Saturday of Mount Sinabung volcano on Sumatra island. Fourteen people, including four schoolchil­dren, were killed...
Sutanta Aditya/Getty Images A resident runs to escape a cloud of hot volcanic ash that engulfed several villages in the Karo district of Indonesia during the eruption Saturday of Mount Sinabung volcano on Sumatra island. Fourteen people, including four schoolchil­dren, were killed...

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