11 hikers dead after Indonesia volcano erupts, survivors found
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At least 11 hikers were found dead and three others were rescued by search teams that worked through the night to find people missing after the eruption of a volcano in western Indonesia, officials said Monday.
Mount Marapi on the island of Sumatra, with a peak of 2,891 (9,484 feet) metres erupted on Sunday, spewing an ash tower 3,000 metres into the sky that rained volcanic debris onto nearby villages.
Officials from local and national agencies revised up the number of hikers on the mountain over the weekend to 75, but search teams found the 11 dead near the crater on Monday morning.
"There are 26 people who have not been evacuated, we have found 14 of them, three were found alive and 11 were found dead," said Abdul Malik, head of Padang Search and Rescue Agency, speaking a day after the eruption.
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Twelve were still missing and 49 had descended the mountain, some who were taken to hospital, he said.
The three survivors were found near the crater and "their condition was weak, and some had burns," said the official.
Rescue workers were taking turns carrying the dead down the mountain due to the arduous terrain.
A clip shared with AFP by rescue teams at the scene showed an ambulance blaring its sirens, rushing an evacuated climber from the scene with burns.
In another clip, a rescue worker with a flashlight strapped to his head piggybacks a hiker who moans in pain and says "God is great" as she is led to safety in the darkness of night.
The eruption was ongoing, which was preventing air evacuations by helicopter, Malik said.
"Visually, until this morning, smokes are still billowing from the top. Visually, everything still looks grey," he said.
BREAKING: 11 hikers killed in Indonesia volcano eruption pic.twitter.com/yVCCndo4VY
— BNO News (@BNONews) December 4, 2023
- Raining ash -
Rudy Rinaldi, head of the West Sumatra Disaster Mitigation Agency told AFP some of the rescued hikers needed medical treatment because of their proximity to the eruption.
"Some suffered from burns because it was very hot, and they have been taken to the hospital," he said.
"Those who are injured were the ones who got closer to the crater."
According to a national search and rescue agency, or Basarnas, list seen by AFP of those found, at least eight people suffered burns, one had burns and a fracture and another had a head wound.
Ahmad Rifandi, an official at the Mount Marapi monitoring station, told AFP that ash rain was observed after the eruption.
"It has reached to Bukittinggi city," he said Sunday, referring to the third-largest city in West Sumatra that has a population of more than 100,000.
Local disaster agency official Ade Setiawan said in a statement residents in local villages were "given masks and reminded to stay inside their houses".
Marapi is on the second alert level of Indonesia's four-step system and authorities have imposed a three-kilometre exclusion zone around its crater.
The Indonesian archipelago sits on the Pacific Ring of Fire, where the meeting of continental plates causes high volcanic and seismic activity.
The Southeast Asian country has nearly 130 active volcanoes.
10 still missing after landslide, flash floods
At least 10 people are still missing after flash floods and a landslide hit a village near Lake Toba on Indonesia's Sumatra island, a rescue official said Monday.
The landslide and floods caused by torrential rain hit residential areas in a village in North Sumatra province late on Friday, killing one person, a 78-year-old woman, sweeping away dozens of houses and destroying a hotel.
Eleven people were initially declared missing but rescuers found another body on Monday, head of Medan search and rescue agency Budiono, who like many Indonesians goes by one name, said in a statement.
Among the missing are children aged six and eight years old.
The search efforts have been divided on water and land, with several boats and divers scouring for the missing while excavations and scouting around Lake Toba were taking place, he said.
They were using sonar detection, fearing their bodies may have been dragged into the world's biggest volcanic lake, the official said.
Around 140 people were evacuated from the village, according to the national search and rescue agency Basarnas.