Tuesday’s World #2 – INDONESIA

Tuesday's World Events   —   Posted on February 20, 2018

(by Ed Adamczyk, UPI and staff reporters at AFP in Karo, North Sumatra, Feb. 19) — Indonesia’s volcanic Mount Sinabung erupted on Monday, sending ash and smoke about 16,000 feet into the air.

No one lives inside a previously announced no-go zone around the volcano. But hundreds of houses outside the 4.3 mile danger zone were covered in volcanic ash.

No injuries were reported, but officials have distributed face masks and urged local residents and tourists to stay indoors to avoid respiratory problems, said local disaster mitigation agency official Nata Nail Perangin-angin.

“In some villages the visibility was barely five metres (16 feet) after the eruption — it was pitch black,” Perangin-angin added.

Mount Sinabung, on the island of Sumatra, erupted in 2010 for the first time in 400 years and has been regarded since as an active volcano. It erupted again in 2013. An eruption the following year killed 16 people, and another in 2016 killed seven.

Monday’s eruption lasted for nearly five minutes.

Rain is expected in the area on Tuesday and Wednesday, which can combine with ash to make slippery travel conditions and increase the possibility of roof collapses and the volcanic version of mudslides, Accuweather reported on Monday. Wet ash also is capable of conducting electricity, which can lead to power failures.

The ash cloud could impact airplane flights around northern Sumatra, to southern Thailand until Tuesday, when the cloud is expected to dissipate. The Australia-based Darwin Volcanic Ash Advisory Center set its aviation alert level to red after the eruption, warning pilots to avoid the area.

Indonesia is home to around 130 volcanoes due to its position on the “Ring of Fire,” a belt of tectonic plate boundaries circling the Pacific Ocean where frequent seismic activity occurs.

Compiled from reports at United Press International (UPI) and Agence France-Presse (AFP).

Map of Indonesian volcanos – from Wikipedia:

 



Background

Indonesia is the world’s third-largest democracy, the world’s largest archipelagic state, and home to the world’s largest Muslim population.