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Indonesia prepares for mass burials after volcano eruption

Earthquake, volcanic ash burst strike Philippines
Manila (AFP) Nov 6, 2010 - A strong 6.0-magnitude earthquake and a burst of volcanic ash struck a region south of the Philippine capital on Saturday in quick sucession, but government experts said the events were unrelated. A earthquake hit the Bicol region early Saturday, shaking people from their sleep but causing no serious damage, the government said. The quake, with an epicentre off the coat of Burias island, about 275 kilometres (171 miles) southeast of Manila, occurred at 12:41 am (1641 GMT Friday), the government seismology office said. Just hours later, Bulusan volcano, located 250 kilometres southeast of Manila, ejected a column of ash about 600 metres into the air, which showered down onto several towns in Bicol, the government said.

Government vulcanologists have raised the alert level for Bulusan from zero to level 1, indicating abnormal activity, possibly a sign of more ash eruptions to come. People were warned not to enter a four-kilometre "danger zone" around the volcano and communities nearby were told to be on alert for volcanic mudslides in case heavy rains mix with the ash deposited on Bulusan's slopes. The Philippines is part of the Pacific Ring of Fire where frequent volcanic eruptions and earthquakes take place. The last major earthquake to cause widespread death and destruction in the Philippines was in 1990, when a 7.7-magnitude quake killed 2,400 people in the country's north.
by Staff Writers
Argomulyo, Indonesia (AFP) Nov 6, 2010
Rescuers picked through the rubble of destroyed homes Saturday as officials prepared for a mass burial of people killed by the violent eruption of Indonesia's most active volcano.

Ash, deadly heat clouds and molten debris gushed from the mouth of Mount Merapi and shot high into the sky, triggering chaos on the roads as people fled their homes.

The death toll from Friday's eruption -- its most violent in more than a century -- rose to 85, with scores more suffering severe burns.

The latest deaths bring the overall toll to 128 since the volcano started erupting on Java island on October 26, a day after a tsunami killed more than 400 people in a remote area off Sumatra island.

The mountain spewed ash over a vast area including the Central Java provincial capital of Yogyakarta, about 28 kilometres (17 miles) to the south, and continued erupting Saturday, choking out hot ash and gas.

Many of the dead were from Argomulyo village, 18 kilometres from the crater, according to emergency response officials and witnesses, with several children under the age of 10 killed.

Dozens from the village were to be buried in a mass grave in Yogyakarta, disaster management spokesman Sutopo Purwo Nugroho said.

"We will bury them in a place where it's safe. There's no way we will have the burial in their village, as the village is within the 20-kilometre danger zone," he said.

Rescuer Utha told AFP as he delivered 10 bodies to the hospital, "I found three bodies: a child, mother and father, still in their bed. They must have been sleeping when the hot ash struck their house.

"We also found a dead man with a phone still in his hand."

Disaster management agency spokesman Sutopo Purwo Nugroho said: "The death toll has risen to 85 people and 289 people are injured."

More than 166,000 people were evacuated after everyone living within the declared "danger zone" had been told to leave their homes immediately, though some were reluctant to abandon their livestock.

Kepuharjo village chief Heri Suprapto, who was evacuated 12 days ago with his wife and four of his children, said he was worried for the safety of people from his village.

"The people from my village are scattered in various temporary shelters. I cannot monitor them all the time," he said.

"We are worried here in shelters. All we do is just wait for aid," Suprapto said, adding it was hard to find suitable milk for his two-year old daughter.

"I can only pray to God. I pray for the mountain to stop erupting," he said.

Government volcanologist Surono said the volcano was hard to predict.

"The eruption from Merapi has not stopped since November 3, although its intensity has gone down and up again," he said, adding there were no plans to expand the "danger zone".

The international airport at Yogyakarta was closed as ash clouds billowed from the 2,914-metre (9,616-foot) mountain to the altitude of cruising jetliners.

It would stay closed until Sunday morning, said general manager Agus Andriyanto, after which they would look at the situation again.

International and regional airlines were affected. Singapore Airlines said it had suspended flights between the city-state and the Indonesian capital Jakarta, which is about 430 kilometres from the volcano.

Malaysian budget carrier AirAsia said flights to the city of Bandung were also disrupted.

Merapi killed around 1,300 people in 1930 but experts say the current eruptions are its biggest convulsions since 1872.

President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono announced the deployment of an army brigade to help with relief and reconstruction in central Java, as the country struggles to cope with dual natural disasters.

A tsunami smashed into villages on the remote Mentawai island chain following a 7.7-magnitude earthquake off the coast on October 25, killing 428 people and leaving 15,000 homeless.

The Indonesian archipelago has dozens of active volcanoes and straddles major tectonic fault lines known as the "ring of fire" from the Indian to the Pacific oceans.



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Erupting Indonesian volcano kills 77
Argomulyo, Indonesia (AFP) Nov 5, 2010
Indonesia's most active volcano killed 77 people Friday in its biggest eruption in over a century, incinerating homes, grounding flights and driving thousands into shelters. Ash, deadly heat clouds and molten debris gushed from the mouth of Mount Merapi and shot high into the sky for most of the night and into the morning, triggering panic and chaos on the roads as people fled in the darknes ... read more







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