Volcano erupts again and spews ash
INDONESIA'S military forced villagers off the slopes of the country's most volatile volcano yesterday, carrying some away screaming as the mountain sent clouds of gray ash cascading down its slopes in its most powerful explosion yet.
The notoriously unpredictable Mount Merapi forced the temporarily closure of an airport and claimed another life, bringing the death toll this week to 36.
Hundreds of kilometers to the west, meanwhile, relief workers said a total of 135 people missing since a tsunami hit a remote Indonesian island chain have been found alive or have returned to their villages. They had fled to the hills to escape the giant wave. There are still 163 missing and 413 dead from the tsunami, officials said.
Many tsunami survivors waited for food and other supplies yesterday as violent storms grounded all aid deliveries. Some of those injured by the towering wave - including a 12-year-old girl with an open chest wound - were suffering without enough painkillers and could die if they aren't evacuated, doctors said at one hospital.
The catastrophes, striking earlier in the week at different ends of the country, have severely tested the emergency response network. Indonesia lies along a cluster of fault lines prone to earthquakes and volcanic activity.
Mount Merapi, which sprang back to life early this week, unleashed a terrifying 21-minute eruption early yesterday, followed by more than 350 volcanic tremors and 33 ash bursts, said Surono, chief of the Center for Volcanology and Geological Hazard Mitigation.
Government camps well away from the base were overflowing with refugees, including most of the 11,000 people who live on the mountain's fertile slopes. They were told yesterday, with signs the danger level was climbing, that they should expect to stay for three more weeks.
Despite such warnings, many people have returned to their land to check on precious crops and livestock. The new eruption triggered a chaotic pre-dawn exit, killing a 44-year-old woman who was fleeing by motorcycle, said Rusdiyanto, head of disaster management in Yogyakarta.
More than 2,000 soldiers were called in to help keep villagers clear of the mountain.
The notoriously unpredictable Mount Merapi forced the temporarily closure of an airport and claimed another life, bringing the death toll this week to 36.
Hundreds of kilometers to the west, meanwhile, relief workers said a total of 135 people missing since a tsunami hit a remote Indonesian island chain have been found alive or have returned to their villages. They had fled to the hills to escape the giant wave. There are still 163 missing and 413 dead from the tsunami, officials said.
Many tsunami survivors waited for food and other supplies yesterday as violent storms grounded all aid deliveries. Some of those injured by the towering wave - including a 12-year-old girl with an open chest wound - were suffering without enough painkillers and could die if they aren't evacuated, doctors said at one hospital.
The catastrophes, striking earlier in the week at different ends of the country, have severely tested the emergency response network. Indonesia lies along a cluster of fault lines prone to earthquakes and volcanic activity.
Mount Merapi, which sprang back to life early this week, unleashed a terrifying 21-minute eruption early yesterday, followed by more than 350 volcanic tremors and 33 ash bursts, said Surono, chief of the Center for Volcanology and Geological Hazard Mitigation.
Government camps well away from the base were overflowing with refugees, including most of the 11,000 people who live on the mountain's fertile slopes. They were told yesterday, with signs the danger level was climbing, that they should expect to stay for three more weeks.
Despite such warnings, many people have returned to their land to check on precious crops and livestock. The new eruption triggered a chaotic pre-dawn exit, killing a 44-year-old woman who was fleeing by motorcycle, said Rusdiyanto, head of disaster management in Yogyakarta.
More than 2,000 soldiers were called in to help keep villagers clear of the mountain.
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