Indonesia tense over volcano threat

October 24th, 2007

Villagers evacuated from around the Indonesian volcano Mount Kelud have been told it could still erupt as frustration over their forced removal grows.

Activity in the volcano slowed on Monday, making it even harder to convince residents to remain in the makeshift refugee shelters.

The alert level at Mount Kelud, one of Indonesia’s deadliest volcanoes, was put at the highest level a week ago and has remained there since.

There have been a series of powerful underground tremors and sharply rising temperatures in the lake of the crater.

However, some of the tens of thousands of villagers who have been forced off the volcano’s slopes say they are losing money while they are kept off their land.

Tremors rocked Mount Kelud, a 1,731-metre peak about 90kms from Indonesia’s second city of Surabaya, for nearly an hour on Friday, Surano, the top volcanologist at the monitoring station, Kristanto, said.

But there has been no major activity since Sunday making it all the more difficult to convince evacuees to remain in makeshift refugee shelters near its base.