WORLD / ASIA-PACIFIC
Indonesia volcano death toll rises
13 killed as Semeru eruption forces people from homes
Published: Dec 05, 2021 05:03 PM
Villagers salvage their belongings in an area covered in volcanic ash at Sumber Wuluh village in Lumajang, Indonesia on December 5, 2021. Photo: AFP

Villagers salvage their belongings in an area covered in volcanic ash at Sumber Wuluh village in Lumajang, Indonesia on December 5, 2021. Photo: AFP

The death toll from a sudden, spectacular eruption of Indonesia's Mount Semeru has risen to 13, disaster officials said Sunday, as rescuers searched villages blanketed in molten ash for survivors.

The eruption of Java's biggest mountain caught locals by surprise on Saturday, sending thousands fleeing its path of destruction and forcing hundreds of families into makeshift shelters.

It left at least 11 villages of Lumajang district in East Java Province coated in volcanic ash, submerging houses and vehicles, smothering livestock and leaving at least 900 evacuees seeking shelter in mosques, schools and village halls.

Dramatic footage showed Semeru pumping a mushroom of ash into the sky, looming ominously over screaming residents of a nearby village as they fled.

"The death toll is now 13 people. Rescuers found more bodies," national disaster mitigation agency (BNPB) spokesman Abdul Muhari told AFP, without specifying the cause of death.

Two of the victims have been identified, he said in a later statement.

At least 57 people were injured in the eruption, of whom 41 suffered burns and were hospitalized, the BNPB said in a press release.

As many as 10 trapped people were rescued from the surrounding areas in Lumajang, Muhari said, as villagers and rescuers worked through the night to find anyone trapped or retrieve bodies.

Local broadcaster Kompas TV reported those rescued were local workers at a sand mining site.

Evacuations were temporarily suspended on Sunday due to hot ash clouds, Indonesia's Metro TV reported.

There is also a risk of heavy rain causing ash sediment to form a new river of hot lava, the country's top volcanologist Surono told the station.

Lava mixed with debris and heavy rain had already destroyed at least one bridge in Lumajang, preventing rescuers from immediately accessing the area.

But emergency service footage on Sunday showed a desolate scene in one village swallowed by the eruption, with roofs of houses protruding from the coat of mud that destroyed them.

Rescue workers dressed in bright orange uniforms worked against a dark-grey backdrop, a scene of ruin surrounded by buckled buildings and fallen trees.

In others, villagers tried to salvage their belongings from wrecked homes. Some held mattresses and furniture on their shoulders while others carried goats alive in their arms.

AFP