Mount Agung volcano erupts on Indonesia’s Bali

Mount Agung's alert status remains at the second-highest level, with a no-go zone 4km from the crater. The volcano is situated in the Karangasem district, about 70km from tourist hub Kuta.PHOTO: SETIAWAN/FACEBOOK

JAKARTA, Apr 21, 2019, DPA, Xinhua. Mount Agung on Indonesia’s resort island of Bali erupted again early on Sunday (April 21), spewing volcanic ash into the sky to a height of 2km, an official said, reported The Straits Times.

The active volcano erupted at 3.21am and the thick ash column was blown to the south-west, causing a drizzle of volcanic ash in Karangasem, Bangli and Klunglung districts, Dr Sutopo Purwo Nugroho, a spokesman for the national disaster mitigation agency (BNPB), said.

No flights were grounded at Bali’s Ngurah Rai International Airport, Dr Sutopo said, adding that there are no immediate reports of casualties.

The volcano’s status remains on alert or level three of four possible levels and the authorities continue to impose a 4km exclusion zone.

The spokesman added that thousands of masks have been distributed to communities over fears of ashes impacting the human respiratory system.

Two other volcanoes popular with tourists on the island of Java also continue to erupt. Mount Bromo in East Java and Mount Merapi in Yogyakarta remain on standby, with exclusion zones also place.

“This a normal situation of an active volcano and there is no need for the public to panic, as long as they remain outside the danger zone. Don’t try to get closer to the crater to document the volcanic activity in the crater,” Dr Sutopo said.

Foreign climbers have tried to ignore the danger zone status and attempted to climb Mount Agung, causing rescuers to scour the mountain in a bid to evacuate them.

Mount Agung is situated in Karangasem district and about 70km from tourist hub Kuta.

In its last eruption in 1963, more than 1,100 people were killed.

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