Mount
Ruang has repeatedly erupted, and officials fear it could collapse and create a
tsunami, with hundreds evacuated from the area
Authorities
in Indonesia have issued a tsunami alert after a volcano erupted several times
in the province of North Sulawesi, spewing a column of smoke more than a mile
into the sky and forcing the evacuation of hundreds of people from their homes.
Mount
Ruang, a stratovolcano, first erupted at 9.45pm local time on Tuesday and then
four times on Wednesday, Indonesia’s volcanology agency said.
Officials
worry that part of the volcano could collapse into the sea and cause a tsunami,
as happened in 1871. Tagulandang island to the volcano’s north-east is again at
risk, and its residents are among those being told to evacuate.
The
alert level for the volcano, which has a peak of 725 metres above sea level,
was raised on Wednesday evening from three to four, the highest level in the
four-tiered system.
“Based
on the result of visual and instrumental observation that showed an increase in
volcanic activity, Mount Ruang’s level was raised from level three to level
four,” Hendra Gunawan, the head of Indonesia’s volcanology agency, said in a
statement.
Authorities
widened a 4km exclusion zone around the crater to 6km on Wednesday evening.
There
were no reports of deaths or injuries, but more than 800 people were evacuated
from two Ruang Island villages to nearby Tagulandang Island, located more than
60 miles north of the provincial capital, Manado, the state agency Antara
reported.
The
volcanology agency said residents of Tagulandang must be evacuated outside the
6km radius by Wednesday evening.
Indonesia’s
national disaster mitigation agency said residents would be relocated to
Manado, the nearest city, on Sulawesi island, a journey of six hours by boat.
In
2018 the eruption of Indonesia’s Anak Krakatau volcano caused a tsunami along
the coasts of Sumatra and Java after parts of the mountain fell into the ocean,
killing 430 people.
In
a statement, Gunawan told people to “be on alert for the potential ejection of
rocks, hot cloud discharges and tsunami caused by the collapse of the volcano’s
body into the sea”.
Ruang’s
initial eruption on Tuesday evening pushed a column of ash 1.2 miles into the
sky, with the second eruption pushing it to 1.5 miles, Muhammad Wafid, the head
of the geological agency, said in a statement.
The
volcanology agency said on Tuesday that volcanic activity had increased at
Ruang after two earthquakes in recent weeks.
Indonesia,
a vast country of archipelagos, sees frequent seismic and volcanic activity due
to its position on the Pacific’s Ring of Fire, an arc where tectonic plates
collide, which stretches from Japan through south-east Asia and across the
Pacific basin.
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