The Riverside Press-Enterprise

Villagers flee sight of red-hot lava, falling ash from erupting volcano

- By Jim Gomez and Joeal Calupitan

Truckloads of villagers Tuesday fled Philippine communitie­s close to the erupting Mayon volcano, traumatize­d by the sight of red-hot lava flowing down its crater and fearful of sporadic blasts of ash.

Nearly 15,000 people have left the mostly poor farming communitie­s within a 3.7-mile radius of Mayon’s crater in northeaste­rn Albay province in forced evacuation­s since volcanic activity spiked last week. Albay’s governor extended the danger zone by a kilometer (more than half a mile) on Monday and asked thousands of residents to be ready to move anytime.

But many opted to flee from the expanded danger zone even before the mandatory evacuation order.

“There’s lava and ashfall already,” Fidela Banzuela, 61, said from a navy truck where she, her daughter, grandchild­ren and neighbors clambered up after leaving their home in San Fernando village close to Mayon. “If the volcano explodes, we won’t see anything because it would be so dark.”

Her daughter, Sarah Banzuela, fled with her two children, including a 2-year-old who has asthma, which she said could be triggered back by volcanic ash that rained down on their village over the weekend.

“There’s ashfall already and, at night, there’s red-hot lava from the volcano that seems to be moving closer to us,” Sarah Banzuela, 22, told The Associated Press. She and her mother arrived at a grade school turned into an evacuation center teeming with other displaced villagers.

After days of showing signs of renewed restivenes­s, including a swarm of rockfalls and a brightoran­ge crater glow visible at night, Mayon began expelling lava Sunday night, which flowed slowly down two gulleys on its southeaste­rn slope, government volcano experts said.

An ash plume that shot up to 328 feet at dawn on Tuesday drifted southeastw­ard with the wind toward

some villages, said Teresito Bacolcol, director of the Philippine Institute of Volcanolog­y and Seismology.

An AP video showed a boulder getting ripped from the side of a dome of lava in Mayon’s crater then plunging and breaking into smaller red-hot pieces as it rolled down and smashed onto other stones on the volcano’s steep slope.

The 8,077-foot Mayon is a top tourist draw in the Philippine­s because of its picturesqu­e conical shape but is the most active of 24 known volcanoes in the archipelag­o. It last erupted violently in 2018, displacing tens of thousands. In 1814, Mayon’s eruption buried entire villages and left more than 1,000 people dead.

With its peak often shrouded by wisps of passing clouds, Mayon appeared calm on Tuesday, but Bacolcol told AP that lava was continuing to flow slowly down its slopes but could not easily be seen under the bright sun.

The volcano had been raised to alert level three on a five-step warning system on Thursday, meaning a hazardous eruption is possible in weeks or days.

The eruption is the latest natural calamity to test the administra­tion of President Ferdinand Marcos Jr., who took office in June last year and inherited an economy that was shattered by two years of the coronaviru­s pandemic, which also deepened poverty and unemployme­nt.

He has deployed some of his Cabinet officials to Albay to help distribute food aid to and reassure displaced villagers.

Liza David Balbin fled with her children to an emergency shelter in Santo Domingo town after she got scared of Mayon’s lava emissions and her farming community of San Antonio was hit by ashfall. The 48-year-old housewife said the government should find an effective way of relocating poor Filipinos like her away from volcanoes, mountainsi­des where landslides are common and coastlines that are lashed by tidal waves.

In 1991, Balbin witnessed Mount Pinatubo blowing its top in one of the biggest volcanic eruptions of the 20th century. The massive ashfall and volcanic mudflows wiped out her village and outlying communitie­s in Pampanga province north of Manila. She survived and years later married a man who took her to his home province of Albay, where they lived in an impoverish­ed village not far from Mayon.

“I escaped from Pinatubo then ended up near Mayon volcano,” she told AP with a laugh. “Why is my life like this?”

“If only we’ve got money, we would have left that danger zone and built a house far away,” said Balbin, who makes a living doing laundry. “Now we’re in an evacuation camp again and it’s really been a difficult life. This is too much.”

 ?? AARON FAVILA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A woman drives a tricycle as Mayon volcano is seen from Legazpi, Albay province, in northeaste­rn Philippine­s, on Tuesday.
AARON FAVILA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A woman drives a tricycle as Mayon volcano is seen from Legazpi, Albay province, in northeaste­rn Philippine­s, on Tuesday.

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