Volcano erupts in Indonesia: 76,000 evacuated, most of Java's airports
shut
More than 76,000 people fled their homes and flights were
grounded across most of Indonesia's densely populated island of Java on Friday
after a volcanic eruption sent a huge plume of ash and sand 17 km (10 miles)
into the air.
The ash cloud from Thursday night's eruption of Mount Kelud
in the province of East Java moved west over the island, forcing the closure of
seven airports and stranding thousands of passengers. The only major airports
still operating on Java were two in the capital, Jakarta.
"Based on
verified data, over 76,000 people have been evacuated from five cities around
the volcano ... and about 200,000 people were affected," National Disaster
Mitigation Agency spokesman Sutopo Nugroho said in a text message.
Mount
Kelud is 90 km (54 miles) south of Indonesia's second biggest city Surabaya, a
major industrial centre. Its airport was closed, along with those of Bandung,
Yogyakarta, Solo, Malang, Semarang and the major oil refinery town of
Cilacap.
They were expected to reopen on Saturday morning, a transport
ministry official told reporters.
Mount Kelud is one of 130 active volcanoes
in the world's fourth most populous country, which sits along the "Ring of Fire"
volcanic belt around the shores of the Pacific Ocean.
Nugroho said the
eruptions had ceased, but the ash had spread as far as 500 km (312 miles) to the
west and northwest. Television broadcast images of planes, streets and houses
blanketed in a thick layer of grey ash.
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