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SHAKE AND BLOW
Volcanoes shut Indonesian airports during holiday rush
by Staff Writers
Surabaya, Indonesia (AFP) July 16, 2015


Smoldering Indonesian volcanoes seen from space
Jakarta (UPI) Jul 16, 2015 - Several airports in Indonesia remain closed Thursday, as volcanoes around the Southeast Asian islands continue to erupt, spewing gas and smoke.

One of those volcanoes is Mount Gamalama in Ternate, North Maluku. On Thursday, it spewed more volcanic ash into the skies over Indonesia.

"Officials from the Mount Gamalama observation post have continued to monitor the volcanic activity to determine whether they need to increase the volcano's alert status," said Darno Lamane, a scientist stationed at the observation post.

Lamane says tremors caused by the active volcano have become increasingly common of the last two days, with 90 recorded on Wednesday.

While the small airport near Guamalama is operating as normal, others are home to only grounded planes.

Mount Raung volcano in East Java continues to release a thick plume of dark gray smoke. A recent series of satellite imagery -- captured early this week -- shows the smoke as drifted south just past the underside of the island Bali.

Raung reportedly erupted once again on Thursday, and a newly invigorated plume of ash and smoke is now streaming west to northwest across Java.

Raung is one of the most active volcanoes on Java, its magmatic activity seen in the gray zone around Ruang's caldera where vegetation is unable to establish itself. Elsewhere on Java, as can be seen from the vantage of near-Earth orbit, is incredibly lush.

Ash spewing from volcanoes closed six airports across Indonesia Thursday, including in the country's second-biggest city, leaving many travellers stranded on the eve of the Muslim Eid holiday.

The international airport serving Surabaya, the country's biggest city after the capital Jakarta, and four smaller airports were closed by the eruption of Mount Raung on the main island of Java, the transport ministry said.

The airport on the remote, eastern island of Ternate was shut due to ash drifting from erupting Mount Gamalama, the ministry said.

The biggest blow to the millions in the world's most populous Muslim-majority country trying to head home to celebrate with their families came with the closure of Surabaya, one of the country's busiest airports.

Thousands of weary travellers packed out the airport terminals, with long lines forming at ticket counters and people sitting and sleeping on the floor.

Indonesian flag carrier Garuda said it had cancelled 48 flights to and from Surabaya, but it was not immediately clear how many flights in total were axed at the airport.

In recent days, people across the vast archipelago have taken to planes, boats and cars to head to their home towns and villages to celebrate Eid, which marks the end of the fasting month of Ramadan and falls on Friday.

The transport ministry said the airport at Surabaya and two others would stay closed until at least early Friday. The airports at Jember and Banyuwangi on Java, close to Mount Raung, would stay closed until at least Friday afternoon.

There was no immediate indication when the airport on Ternate might reopen.

The closures would be "updated continually to adjust to the developing situation related to the spread of volcanic ash from Mount Raung," said a transport ministry statement.

The shutdowns came just days after the airport on the resort island of Bali was closed by ash from Mount Raung, stranding thousands of foreign holidaymakers. Bali airport was open and operating normally Thursday.

Disaster agency spokesman Sutopo Purwo Nugroho said that Mount Raung was hurling thick smoke up to 2,000 metres (6,500 feet) into the air on Thursday which was drifting west. However he added it was not yet necessary to evacuate anyone living in the area.

Air traffic is regularly disrupted by volcanic eruptions in Indonesia, which is home to 130 active volcanoes.

The main concern for airlines regarding volcanic ash is not that it can affect visibility but rather that it could damage aircraft, as it turns into molten glass when sucked into plane engines, according to experts.

aa-sr/kb

Garuda

AirAsia


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