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Weather clears for Indonesia tsunami aid as toll climbs

Panic as Indonesia volcano spews more gas and ash
Umbulharjo, Indonesia (AFP) Oct 31, 2010 - Indonesia's most active volcano which claimed at least 36 lives last week spewed more searing clouds of gas and ash Sunday, triggering fresh panic among locals. Azis, an official at the volcanology office in the central Java city of Yogyakarta, said at around 3:00 pm (0800 GMT) that "heat clouds and ash are streaming down from the mouth of Mount Merapi". Triyono, another official located at the volcanology post seven kilometres (four miles) from the peak of Mount Merapi, counted at least three emissions. "The heat clouds flowed as far as 3.5 kilometres down the volcano's southern slopes," he said. Dozens of terrified residents fled Umbulharjo village, 12 kilometres from the peak, on motorcycles and cars, an AFP correspondent saw.

Hundreds of locals had fled in panic when the volcano erupted violently early Saturday, sparking chaos as people tried to scramble to safety, fearful of a repeat of last week's deadly eruptions. The city airport is open but at least one airline has moved its flights to neighbouring Solo city for safety reasons. "Due to safety considerations, all take-offs and landings have been taking place at Solo airport since yesterday. The Yogyakarta airport has a lot of ash which could enter and stall the engines," Pudjobroto, a spokesman for national flag carrier Garuda Indonesia, said. "We don't want to take risks and will monitor developments," he added. More than 50,000 people are living in cramped temporary shelters near Yogyakarta, having been ordered to evacuate a 10-kilometre danger zone. The 2,914-metre (9,616-foot) Mount Merapi, which means "Mountain of Fire", is the most active of the 69 volcanoes with histories of eruptions in Indonesia.
by Staff Writers
South Pagai, Indonesia (AFP) Oct 31, 2010
Indonesia ramped up aid operations Sunday for victims of last week's devastating tsunami, as the toll climbed despite the discovery of 135 traumatised villagers who were feared dead.

Monsoonal storms and high seas have plagued efforts to reach disaster-struck coastal villages since they were crushed by the three-metre (10-foot) wall of water late on Monday night, after an earthquake off the coast of Sumatra.

But aid chiefs said the weather had cleared early Sunday and more helicopters were on the way to ferry aid to isolated communities accessible only by sea or air.

"It's a clear, bright day today so we hope to be able to reach all the isolated villages," relief official Arif Rahman said.

"Relief distributions are running smoothly," said West Sumatra provincial disaster management head Harmensyah.

Bottled water, canned food, medicine and tents finally arrived by air Sunday to isolated Tumalei village on North Pagai island, where the 200 residents had been surviving on anything they could scavenge in the forests.

"We ate bananas, yam, coconuts we found in the jungle," a villager told AFP.

As rescuers slowly fanned out across the worst-hit islands of North and South Pagai, the death count rose with the discovery of ever more bodies strewn on beaches or wedged under the debris.

The official toll climbed to 450, with another 96 missing.

"We're still looking for them... there's a high likelihood they are dead, mostly buried in sand," relief official Joskamatir said of those still unaccounted for.

Many of the dead are believed to have been dragged out to sea with the receding waters or buried beneath the sand.

But in a rare piece of good news, 135 people were found alive on Saturday, hiding on high ground and too afraid of another wave to return to their shattered villages.

"There were also other individuals who have come to the temporary shelters alive. There were also others who returned to their villages," disaster management official Agus Prayitno said.

Emergency services in Indonesia are being further stretched by the continued eruption of Mount Merapi in central Java, where some 50,000 people have been evacuated to temporary shelters.

Terrified residents fled in panic when the archipelago's most active volcano convulsed again just after midnight on Saturday, threatening a repeat of explosions on Tuesday that claimed at least 36 lives.

No one was killed in the latest eruption, but hospital staff reported that two people died in the chaotic rush to escape, including a woman who was hit by a truck.

Volcanic ash rained down on the Central Java provincial capital of Yogyakarta 26 kilometres (16 miles) away from the crater on Saturday, shutting the airport for over an hour.

National flag carrier Garuda Indonesia has moved its flights to neighbouring Solo city since Saturday, citing "safety considerations".

More searing clouds of gas and ash streamed down the volcano's southern slopes -- reaching as far as 3.5 kilometres -- on Sunday, triggering fresh panic among locals who fled on motorcycles and cars.

Government volcanologist Subandrio said more eruptions were likely and warned evacuees not to tempt fate by going home too soon.

"We will even have to evaluate whether we need to widen the exclusion zone because we should not downplay the threat -- Mount Merapi is extremely dangerous," he said.

Many displaced people returned to the slopes of 2,914-metre Merapi, a sacred landmark in Javanese tradition whose name means "Mountain of Fire", to tend to their livestock during the day.

Extra police and troops were posted at checkpoints on roads leading into the 10-kilometre exclusion zone, and officials reported new arrivals at the shelters following Saturday's eruption.

"People have voluntarily chosen to stay further away as they were traumatised and wanted to avoid the danger zone," one village administrator, Suranto, told AFP.

Australia and the United States have pledged aid worth a total of three million dollars while the European Commission released 1.5 million euros (two million dollars) for victims of both disasters.

Indonesia straddles a region known as the "Pacific Ring of Fire", with scores of active volcanoes and major fault lines. Almost 170,000 Indonesians were killed in the 2004 Asian tsunami.



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Scores found alive in Indonesia tsunami zone
South Pagai, Indonesia (AFP) Oct 30, 2010
Scores of people feared dead in Indonesia's tsunami disaster zone were found alive Saturday as rescue workers began to reach remote island communities five days after the killer wave. The discovery came as Indonesia struggled with disaster on two fronts following another powerful eruption of the archipelago's most active volcano, which sparked chaos and spewed ash over a vast area of central ... read more







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