JAKARTA – A volcano located in Indonesia’s eastern island of Halmahera erupted early on Jan 15, spewing a 4km-high ash cloud, forcing the authorities to raise the alert level in surrounding areas to the highest, officials said.
Mount Ibu erupted at 7.11am am for around two minutes, the country’s volcanology agency said in a statement. Clouds of thick grey ash billowed into the sky leaning towards the west, said Mr Muhammad Wahid, the agency head.
“Residents and tourists should not have any activities within at least 5km from the crater,” he said.
Mount Ibu also erupted on Jan 14, spewing 3km high volcanic ash.
There are around 13,000 residents living near the volcano, said the spokesman of Indonesia’s disaster agency, Mr Abdul Muhari. However, there is no plan to evacuate the residents so far.
“Today’s eruption has not yet affected the residents directly. But we have deployed personnel just in case evacuation is needed,” he told Reuters.
Ibu’s activities follow a series of eruptions of different volcanoes in Indonesia, which sits on the Pacific “Ring of Fire” and has 127 active volcanoes.
Ibu had a series of eruptions in 2024. In May, it forced the evacuation of people living in seven nearby villages. REUTERS
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