The last eruption in Indonesia was just a couple of weeks ago.
Indonesia
volcano eruption sparks evacuations and airport closures
Mt
Kelud spews ash and sand over six-mile radius, grounding flights and
affecting 200,000 people
14
Febraury, 2014
A
volcano erupted late on Thursday night on the heavily populated
Indonesian island of Java, sending a huge plume of ash and sand 10
miles into the air and forcing the closure of three airports.
Mt
Kelud is 85 miles (140km) south of Indonesia’s second biggest city,
Surabaya, a major industrial centre. The cloud from the eruption was
seen far to the west and forced the shutdown of airports at Surabaya
and the cities of Yogyakarta and Solo. Airlines in neighbouring
countries including Australia said they were cancelling
flights to the affected areas
and destinations further afield such as Bali, Christmas Island and
the Cocos due to the dangers to aviation from the volcanic ash cloud.
“Areas
to the west of Mt Kelud, including central Java, Yogyakarta, Cilacap,
Magelang, Temanggung and Boyolali are still experiencing showers of
ash because last night the biggest eruption ... threw sand and ash
17km into the air to the west,” National Disaster Mitigation Agency
spokesman Sutopo Nugroho said by telephone.
Cilacap
is home to a major oil refinery but there was no immediate word on
whether its operations had been affected. Its refineries supply about
a third of the country’s fuel needs.
The
agency later said the cloud was dissipating and the volcano was no
longer erupting.
Nugroho
said the agency was still trying to confirm reports that two people
had died. “We don’t have data yet on how many people have been
evacuated in total. We can say 200,000 people were affected. We
received reports of deaths but we have not verified them yet,” he
said.
The
eruption caused minimal damage to buildings, Sutopo said, but had
left 3-5cm of ash and sand on roads. President Susilo Bambang
Yudhoyono said he planned to visit the area near Kelud.
An
estimated 200,000 people live within a six-mile (10km) radius of Mt
Kelud, one of nearly 130 active volcanoes in the world’s fourth
most populous country. Many of the people who had evacuated were
returning to their homes to clean up, authorities said.
At
least 11 people were killed earler this month in the north of the
island of Sumatra when Mount Sinabung erupted. The volcano has been
spewing lava and ash for months, forcing thousands to flee the area
and destroying crops.
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