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Death toll from Indonesia’s volcano eruption climbs to 34

Search and rescue operations are still under way to find 16 people missing after the
eruption of Java’s Mount Semeru. The death toll from the eruption on Saturday of
the highest volcano on Indonesia’s Java island has risen to at least 34, local
officials said, and rescue operations are still under way.Mount Semeru, in the
Lumajang district of East Java province, spewed thick columns of ash more than
12,000 metres (40,000 feet) into the sky, with searing gas and lava flowing down its
slopes after the sudden eruption. The disaster left entire streets filled with mud and
ash, swallowing homes and vehicles in several villages.

“So far, 34 people have died and 16 are still being searched [for],” Wayan Suyatna,
head of the local search and rescue agency, told state media on Tuesday, raising an
earlier death toll of 14. He added that nearly 3,700 people have been evacuated
from the affected area.

Rescuers have been battling dangerous conditions since the eruption, searching
for survivors and bodies in the volcanic debris, wrecked buildings and destroyed
vehicles. Search crews deployed dogs on Tuesday to aid the operation.

Mount Semeru has remained active since Saturday, with small eruptions keeping
emergency workers and residents on edge. On Tuesday, there were three small
eruptions, each spewing ash about a kilometre (3,300 feet) into the sky, authorities
said. Officials have advised locals not to travel within 5km (3.1 miles) of Semeru’s
crater, as the nearby air is highly polluted and could affect vulnerable groups.

Indonesia, an archipelago of more than 270 million people, is prone to earthquakes


and volcanic activity because it sits along the Pacific “Ring of Fire”, a horseshoe-
shaped series of fault lines.(This article was published in Al Jazeera Creative
Commons)

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