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Showing posts with label Natural Disaster. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Natural Disaster. Show all posts

Indonesian Survives His Second Tsunami

The Jakarta Globe, March 15, 2011

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Indonesian Zahrul Fuadi has twice survived tsunamis  — once, in his hometown in Aceh in 2004 and then again in Sendai, Japan, last Friday.

The 39-year-old is among Indonesians evacuated from Sendai, one of the worst-hit areas affected by Friday's 4-meter tsunami.

“I feel as if my family and I are being chased by tsunamis from Aceh to Japan,” Zahrul said, as quoted by news portal Kompas.com.

When the tsunami wreaked havoc on Aceh on Dec. 26, 2004, Zahrul and has family were spared their lives.

“After the quake in 2004, we escaped on a motorbike as fast as possible and we made it,” he said, adding that his house in Simpang Mesra village, Banda Aceh, was destroyed in the disaster.

Zahrul, a professor of engineering at Syah Kuala University, and his family moved to Sendai the following year after he received a scholarship to complete a PhD at Tohoko University.

“I have lived here for six years and I had planned to return to Aceh, but as fate would have it, I endured another huge earthquake before coming home,” he said.

When the 8.9-magnitude earthquake struck off the northeastern coast of Japan, Zahrul was in the middle of a presentation at the Sendai campus.

“The tremor was so intense, everyone hid under their desks,” he said.

As the tremor continued for longer than two minutes, Zahrul knew the worst was yet to come.

“The tremor was very strong and similar to the earthquake in Aceh. I thought a tsunami was on the way,” he said.

He and his family were spared the second time because the campus is located 15 kilometers from the coast on high land.

Zahrul was staying at the Indonesian evacuation center in Tokyo and was scheduled to fly home to Indonesia on Tuesday.

“Despite what has happened, my family and I have so much to thank God for. We have survived two of the biggest natural disasters recorded in history,” he said.

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Govt to bear tsunami victims` living cost

Antara News, Friday, December 3, 2010

Padang, W Sumatra (ANTARA News) - The government plans to bear the living cost of tsunami victims in the Mentawai Islands until the rehabilitation and reconstruction efforts have been completed, an official said.

"The living cost of each tsunami victim has been projected to reach Rp6,000 per day. The maximum number of people in each family entitled to receive such assistance is five. The government will bear the living cost of tsunami victims for one month," Head of the West Sumatra Provincial Social Service Kafrawi said on Thursday.

The government will start bearing the living cost of tsunami victims as of early January 2011, he said adding the local authorities are in the middle of registering recipients of such assistance.

"We ask the Mentawai district administration to send a list of recipients to the West Sumatra governor as soon as possible so that we can quickly pass it on to the Social Service Ministry," he said on the sidelines of a meeting between West Sumatra

Governor Irwan Prayitno and Indonesian Red Cross (PMI) Chairman Jusuf Kalla here.
He said his office recently held a meeting with the Social Service to discuss the living cost and the ministry had given the green light to bear the living cost of tsunami victims.

"We hope the plan can be realized according to the schedule so it can alleviate the economic burden of the tsunami victims in the islands," he said.

The National Disaster Management Agency (BNPB) stated the big earthquake followed by a tsunami in Mentawai Islands had affected a large number of villages and caused 408 deaths, 303 people to go missing and 270 others to sustain severe injuries.

The number of affected people was initially estimated at 33,817. However, many islands had become inaccessible and the number of potentially affected people could be over 65,000.

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Are You Ready for Indonesia's Disasters?

Jakarta Globe, Ade Mardiyati | November 04, 2010

On the fateful morning of Dec. 26, 2004, Nurhasimah, also known as Ima, felt an earthquake in Tamiang, a district in eastern Aceh close to North Sumatra. Ima, who moved there to work as a teacher, thought the quake’s epicenter was in the North Sumatra capital, Medan. She had no inkling of the tragedy befalling members of her family in other parts of Aceh.

“Later on, I saw on TV that [the quake’s epicenter was not in Medan], and that a tsunami had struck North Aceh where my father and siblings lived. Then my uncle told me that Banda Aceh, where my grandmother and other relatives lived, had suffered the same fate,” she said.

“I immediately tried to contact them but was unable to get through because communication was already cut off.”

In the evening, she learned that her father and siblings had survived the disaster. But her grandmother, aunts, uncles and cousins were missing. Their bodies were never found.

“I felt faint and became sick. I went to the doctor and found out that my blood pressure had dropped to just 120/70,” she said. “I was stressed out and traumatized.”

Ima said that she was familiar with minor earthquakes caused by the rumbling of Mount Seulawah in Aceh, but could never have imagined a disaster the magnitude of the Indian Ocean tsunami, which killed more than 100,000 people in the province.

“There was never any information or training about disasters or what to do when they happen,” she said.

“Not until the tsunami hit the province and claimed the lives of so many people did the local government start offering such things.”

Since the 2004 disaster, the Acehnese have become more aware and better informed about what to do in the event of another disaster.

Ima said that many families in the province now keep emergency bags ready in their homes, which contain clothes and important documents.

“Just in case something happens, you can just grab it and leave the house,” she said.

While most Indonesians are aware that they live in a country where natural disasters such as earthquakes, tsunamis and volcanic eruptions are a frequent risk, most people not really know what to do when they happen.

Hery Prakoso, who drives a cab in Jakarta for a living, said he was not prepared and would likely be at a loss for what to do if a natural disaster struck the capital.

“All I know is that I would save my wife and son first and take the suitcase that I keep all the important documents in with me,” the 47-year-old said.

“But where to go, I have no idea. Maybe to higher ground, but I’m not sure where that is in Jakarta.”

Andrew Revindo, a 19-year-old university student in Jakarta, shared Hery’s confusion. “I know I should get out of the building if there is an earthquake. But if a tsunami comes, I would have no idea what to do,” he said.

Gagah Prakoso, from the National Search and Rescue Agency (Basarnas), said that Indonesians were not prepared to deal with emergency situations.

“There needs to be a concerted effort to education people about what to do in the event of a disaster, no matter how small it is,” he said.

He gave the example of what happened in the remote town of Wasior, in West Papua, which was devastated after flash floods and landslides tore through the area on Oct. 4.

At least 161 people have been confirmed dead, another 145 are missing and presumed dead, and thousands more were displaced from their homes.

“All the displaced people living in tents in Wasior did was eat and sleep,” he said.

“They could have been potential resources to help around the shelter and they would have known better because [Wasior] was their home. But they didn’t know what else to do because they had not been briefed on what to do.”

Ima believes that knowing how to read signs from Mother Nature is better than simply reacting to a disaster.

“Like the tsunami in Aceh. It would still have happened, but it probably wouldn’t have claimed as many lives as it did had people known the signs,” she said.

She said that she later heard how when the ocean began retreating at Ulee Lheue Beach in Banda Aceh, people went down to the shore to collect fish, failing to recognize the warning sign for an impending tsunami.

“It was not normal for the ocean to retreat like that. That was a sign of something bad, but no one knew what,” she said. “I guess that if we had been informed earlier on, we wouldn’t have lost so much.”

Fery Manuputty, who lives in Ambon, Maluku, which is surrounded by water, echoed Ima’s sentiment.

“The ability to read the signs [from Mother Nature] and knowing what to do when a natural disaster occurs are very important, especially for people who live in areas that are prone to such things,” he said.

“Earthquakes, although minor, happen frequently in Ambon, so I have learned what to do in case a strong one hits.

“The last big earthquake that was followed by a small tsunami took place in 1988 when Mount Api erupted [on Maluku’s Banda Naira Island], but you never know.”

Fery also pointed out that whenever an earthquake in Ambon took place, residents often got their information from Jakarta-based television stations.

“The local government is obviously not prepared. They have to do better than that given that earthquakes happen frequently in Maluku,” he said.

If one theme emerges, it is that people want the government to do more to make sure that its citizens know how to read the signs and then known what to do when disaster happens.

“I’m sure the government has done [information campaigns before], but it has to do a better job of it and take it more seriously. It needs to convince people that it is important to know these things,” taxi driver Hery said.

University student Andrew also wants a more thorough information campaign. “Information on disasters should not be given only on TV, as the government has mostly done in the past. Not everyone in Indonesia has access to a TV,” he said.

“The Indonesian government should take more action. Go to remote areas, talk to the people and make sure the information is out there for everyone.”


What to Do When Mother Nature Strikes

Earthquake.
  • Don’t panic. Be aware that some earthquakes are actually foreshocks and a larger earthquake might occur.
  • Minimize your movements to a nearby safe place.
  • If you are indoors, stay there until the shaking has stopped and you are sure that exiting is safe.

If indoors:
  • Drop to the ground, take cover by getting under a sturdy table or other piece of furniture and hold on until the shaking stops.
  • If there isn’t a table or desk near you, cover your face and head with your arms and crouch in an inside corner of the building.
  • Stay away from glass, windows, outside doors and walls and anything that could fall, such as lighting fixtures or furniture.
  • Use a doorway for shelter only if it is in close proximity to you and if you know it is a strongly supported, load-bearing doorway.
  • Stay inside until the shaking stops and it is safe to go outside.
  • Research has shown that most injuries occur when people inside buildings attempt to move to a different location inside the building or try to leave.
  • Be aware that the electricity may go out or the sprinkler systems or fire alarms may turn on.
  • Do not use the elevators as they might stop and strand you.

If outdoors:
  • Stay there. Move away from buildings, streetlights and utility wires.
  • The greatest danger exists directly outside buildings, at exits and alongside exterior walls.
  • Ground movement during an earthquake is seldom the direct cause of death or injury.
  • Most earthquake-related casualties result from collapsing walls, flying glass and falling objects.

If in a moving vehicle:
  • Stop as quickly as safety permits and stay in the vehicle.
  • Avoid stopping near or under buildings, trees, overpasses and utility wires.
  • Proceed cautiously once the earthquake has stopped.
  • Avoid roads, bridges or ramps that might have been damaged by the earthquake.

If trapped under debris:
  • Do not light a match.
  • Do not move about or kick up dust.
  • Cover your mouth with a handkerchief or clothing.
  • Tap on a pipe or wall so rescuers can locate you.
  • Use a whistle if one is available.
  • Shout only as a last resort. Shouting can cause you to inhale dangerous amounts of dust.


Tsunami.
  • An earthquake is a natural tsunami warning.
  • If you feel a strong quake, do not stay close to shore.
  • If you hear of an earthquake, be aware of the possibility of a tsunami and listen to the radio or television for additional information.
  • Remember that an earthquake can trigger killer waves thousands of miles across the ocean many hours after the event generated a tsunami.
  • An approaching tsunami is preceded by an unusual fall or rise in the water level.
  • If you see the ocean receding unusually rapidly, that’s a good sign that a tsunami may be on its way.
  • Go to high ground immediately.
  • A tsunami is a series of waves and the first wave may not be the most dangerous.
  • The danger from a tsunami can last for several hours after the arrival of the first wave strikes.
  • A tsunami wave train may come as a series of surges that are five minutes to an hour apart.
  • The cycle may be marked by a repeated retreat and advance of the ocean.
  • Stay out of danger until you hear it is safe.
  • Use your common sense. If you feel or hear of a strong earthquake do not wait for an official tsunami warning.
  • Tell your family and friends to join you in leaving for high ground. 

Sources: US Federal Emergency Management Agency Web site, fema.gov, and National Geographic


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Depression and distress affecting Merapi victims

Slamet Susanto, The Jakarta Post, Yogyakarta | Thu, 11/04/2010 10:48 AM

The cramped conditions in shelters and the sheer anxiety over the prospect of future eruptions are causing a number of Merapi refugees to suffer depression.

“Four evacuees are suffering from severe depression, and some are even suffering from psychological disorders and have been referred to mental hospitals,” health worker Retno Kusumastuti said Wednesday.

Retno, a Cangkringan community health center employee, was working at an evacuee health post in Glagahharjo, Sleman.

The four patients often daydreamed and cried hysterically, she said. “We have to call volunteers and soldiers to help calm them down.”

Many more evacuees are reported to be suffering similar distress. However, a lack of volunteers able to provide psychological care has made it difficult to assist such people, she said.

“Psychologists are available at posts, but not every day,” Retno said.

Fellow health attendant Ela Prastika was alarmed by another issue, citing the lack of integrated handling of child evacuees, despite the fact that children were more susceptible to trauma and difficult to help.

Wardi, 70, from Kinahrejo, Sleman, said stress levels were very high because of the overcrowded conditions in shelters.

Wardi and 80 other families who lived in the hardest-hit ring-1 zone have now lost their homes.

“We see other evacuees returning home to tend to their cattle, but our homes were destroyed and our cows were killed in the first eruption. We are more and more stressed every day, and if we stay at the shelter we may go insane,” said Wardi, who lost his son in Merapi’s first eruption on Oct. 26.

Wardi was no longer staying in an overcrowded shelter, having moved to a more spacious one at the Al Qodir Islamic boarding school in Kedung village, Cangkringan.

The Al Qodir shelter currently holds 300 refugees. The fact that all had lost their homes could psychologically help the group, Wardi said.

“If we stayed with others who still had their homes, we who lost our homes would become crazy, one by one,” he said.

The overcrowded conditions are partly attributable to the fact that huge numbers of residents living in safe zones have also taken refuge at shelters after they became panicked by Merapi’s explosive eruptions.

Wukirsari shelter, which was designed to hold 1,500, is currently sheltering 3,000 people. Many evacuees have been forced to sleep on the shelter’s porch.

Grashia Mental Hospital is currently treating 16 patients with mental disorders stemming from the Merapi eruptions.

Hospital director Rohana Dwi Astuti said depression and mental disorders were triggered by high levels of anxiety following the Oct. 26 eruption.

“As a result, many evacuees are anxious, worried and suffering from severe depression,” she said.

The hospital plans to carry out field counseling next week.

“We want to help evacuees suffering from psychological issues,” she said.


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Indonesian President Promises to Beef Up Crisis Response Agency

Jakarta Globe, Camelia Pasandaran & Lutfia Ismira | November 02, 2010

Jakarta. In the wake of criticism over relief efforts following last week’s natural disasters, President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono said on Monday that the National Disaster Management Agency would be provided with the necessary equipment to do its job.

A plume of ash and smoke shot about 3,500
meters into the air, covering nearby Yogyakarta
in a layer of dust. (EPA, AFP Photos)
He said the head of the agency, known as BNPB, held ministerial rank and therefore could sidestep the bureaucracy.

This meant the BNPB did not have to waste time coordinating with other ministries.

Commenting on criticism of the relief effort, he told officials to just focus on their jobs.

“I say don’t worry about all that,” he told a cabinet meeting. “Think of it as a whipping. It always happens. There are people who give help, and there are also many who criticize and forget to help.”

B ad weather and rough seas on Monday continued to hamper the distribution of relief supplies for the tsunami survivors .

The situation was made worse by tropical cyclone Orchid, which is bringing heavy rain and high waves to the Mentawai area.

Yudhoyono said he wanted extra funding for the agency in the 2011 budget to ensure its effective operation.

“The BNPB should have a high level of readiness, not only concerning its personnel but also its communication equipment and air transport,” he said.

The BNPB has 10 helicopters, two Hercules planes, five warships, two ships, six speedboats and 15 longboats at its disposal.

“We need to change our point of view in handling disasters as we are vulnerable,” Yudhoyono said. “We have to do everything to survive in the face of disasters.”

He praised the military for quickly mobilizing its Hercules planes to deliver supplies in Mentawai, where access was difficult.

“This model should be followed in the future,” he said. “If we cannot get supplies through by sea it should be through air.”

However, he said the first priority should be rescuing the injured. “I underline the need for speedy evacuations,” the president said . “The use of helicopters should be prioritized to transport the injured.”

The president said people in disaster-prone areas should be trained in what to do when a tragedy struck.

“There should be new policies that will really be able to reduce the number of victims when natural disasters hit,” he said.

In the case of Mentawai, the president said it was dangerous to allow people to return to villages too close to the sea. “We need a new regulation or a law if necessary to reorganize this for their own safety,” Yudhoyono said.

Andi Arief, the president’s adviser for social and disaster management, said the death toll from the tsunami had been revised slightly down to 431, with 88 missing, presumed dead. About 15,000 people had been displaced.

BNPB’s director of disaster risk reduction, Sutopo Purwo Nugroho, said that apart from bad weather, their efforts were being hampered by poor communications.

“We are also faced with technical hindrances such as communications, which are only available in Sikakap, while electricity and communications infrastructure were never available in the rest of the areas that have been affected,” he said.

Despite the hindrances, he claimed the flow of aid was being well coordinated.

“We realize, however, that not all the aid supplies are being distributed evenly among the victims, considering the circumstances,” Sutopo said.


Another week of disaster - The Jakarta Post/Irma Rahmi Damayanti


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Government prepares disaster insurance

The Jakarta Post | Fri, 10/29/2010 11:35 AM

Indonesia is preparing a disaster insurance scheme to cover financial losses and provide for emergency needs as the country constantly faces strings of natural disasters causing heavy social burdens.

Finance Minister Agus Martowardojo said Thursday the insurance was important as natural disasters have caused increasing financial losses and emergency needs to handle the aftermath of such disasters.

The most recent natural disasters of an earthquake-triggered tsunami in Mentawai, West Sumatra, and the eruption Mount Merapi in Yogyakarta, have rallied people to show stronger support for the establishment of disaster insurance.

“I have asked the Indonesia Capital Market and Financial Institution Supervisory Agency chairman to conduct a study on the establishment of disaster insurance,” Agus told reporters at the Finance Ministry.

He added disaster insurance was a very common initiative for developed countries but not developing countries, including Indonesia.

Agus said the government would soon reveal the study results in a meeting with stakeholders at the ministry.

“In principle, we have reached an agreement on the need to establish disaster insurance,” he said. “The insurance may be similar to other forms of life insurance,” he added without elaborating.

He only said the premium would be taken from the state budget although he was not sure whether it would be included in the 2011 State Budget.

Agus said the initiative needed careful arrangement including the insurance form, risk calculation and disbursement process.

“We will carefully study an appropriate insurance design to prevent any difficulties in its claiming process,” he said.

“The proposed disaster insurance will be reinsured with world-class reinsurance companies. I haven’t seen any Indonesian companies that are ready to carry out the reinsurance program.”

Agus also said the government had proposed an additional disaster fund of Rp 150 billion (US$16.8 million) to the budget body of the House of Representatives.

Previously, the government allocated a disaster fund of Rp 50 billion. Agus said the fund was separated from the budgetary allocation for the rehabilitation program. “The disaster fund will be managed by the National Disaster Management Agency [BNPB],” he said.

The post-disaster rehabilitation program would have a separate budgetary allocation of more than Rp 3.5 trillion.

The government allocates a total of about Rp 4 trillion for disaster management activities, higher than the Rp 3.79 trillion in the Revised 2010 State Budget.

Ahsanul Qosasih, a member of the House Commission XI overseeing finance and banking, deplored the government for being unresponsive to strong public demand on the establishment of disaster insurance to minimize disaster risks.

“It’s time for the government to establish disaster insurance,” he was quoted as saying by detik.com on Wednesday.

“Disaster insurance is very urgent to support the disaster fund allocated within the state budget.”

He said that his Commission had asked the Finance Ministry and the BNPB to officially propose and design a long-term disaster insurance scheme.

“We have a very limited budgetary allocation for disaster management,” he said, adding that the insurance would be needed to cover any losses caused by natural disasters. (ebf)

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Heartache for Survivors in Tsunami-Hit Indonesia

Jakarta Globe, Supri Lindra | October 28, 2010

Muntei Baru Baru, Indonesia. Exhausted, confused and hungry, 20-year-old Indonesian housewife Chandra trudged barefoot through her tsunami-wrecked village in a desperate search for her missing baby.

Villagers wrapping bodies in plastic in the
tsunami-hit village of Muntei Baru Baru village
on the Mentawai Islands. (Reuters Photo)
“I sifted through rubble, looked in collapsed houses and in the temporary shelters but there’s no sign of him,” she said, tears welling up. “I know he’s dead but I keep praying he’s still alive. I’m so tired. I’ve not eaten for two days ... I have no appetite.”

Chandra was one of the survivors after a huge wave triggered by a devastating 7.7-magnitude earthquake Monday ravaged the remote Mentawai islands off the west coast of Sumatra, killing 343 people and leaving 338 missing.

Disaster response officials said bodies were being found on beaches and coastal areas in the Mentawai island chain, which took the full force as the tsunami washed away entire villages.

Chandra said she was separated from her husband and six-month-old son as they were trying to flee the tsunami when it hit their coastal village in North Pagai island, one of the two worst-hit in the Mentawai group.

“I survived because a coconut tree fell and kept me from being swept away. My survival was a miracle from God,” she said.

Her husband’s body was found by locals and buried along with dozens of other villagers in a mass grave on Wednesday.

The tsunami had flattened their village of Muntei Baru Baru, destroying more than 70 mostly wooden houses, a school and a church. Left behind were skeletons of houses, fallen trees and a fetid mud pool.

Survivors said they had almost no warning that the three-meter wall of water was bearing down on them, raising questions about whether an early alert system laid down after the 2004 Asian tsunami had failed.

An AFP photographer who came to North Pagai aboard an aid ship saw hundreds of villagers being treated at a medical clinic, many requiring stitches to open cuts suffered as they were tossed around in the roiling sea.

Like Chandra, dozens of villagers are still trying to come to terms with the tragedy.

Many scrabbled through rubble to look for missing relatives while others, dazed by the disaster, sat under coconut trees awaiting news from rescuers.

Chandra said she did not know what the future holds.

“I’ve no intention to rebuild my house. I now live alone, I don’t know what to do,” she said.

“Whatever happens, I’m not going to leave this village. This place is the burial place for my husband and baby.”

Agence France-Presse

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Foreign parties offer assistance for Mentawai emergency response

Antara News, Wednesday, October 27, 2010

Padang, West Sumatra (ANTARA News) - Several foreign parties have offered assistance for emergency response efforts in tsunami-hit Mentawai, West Sumatra.

The foreign parties were the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) and Australia`s disaster management body.

But a spokesman for the National Disaster Mitigation Agency (BNPB), Sucipto, said here on Tuesday night Indonesia did not as yet need foreign assistance to deal with the aftermath of Tuesday`s tsunami in Mentawai, West Sumatra, which happened moments after a magnitude-7.2 earthquake.

Speaking to the press in the presence of West Sumatra Governor Irwan Prayitno, Sucipto said President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono had stated the West Sumatra provincial and Mentawai district governments were able to conduct an emergency response without foreign aid.

Sucipto said joint rescue teams, made up of police and military personnel, Indonesian Red Cross (PMI), and volunteers from West Sumatra would immediately be deployed to Mentawai to evacuate the dead victims as well as survivors.

On Tuesday night, the death toll of the earthquake and tsunami in the Mentawai Islands was recorded at 112.

At least 502 people were reported missing and thousands of others had fled to safer grounds following the disasters, according to the results of a coordination meeting led by West Sumatra Governor Irwan Prayitno and attended by Mentawai district head Edison on Tuesday night.

Efforts to send relief aid to the affected area were hampered by bad weather in Mentawai waters.

By Tuesday night, only one ship carrying relief aid, volunteers and medical workers had headed to Mentawai.

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Sinabung Volcano Evacuees Complain of Illness, Stress

Jakarta Globe, August 30, 2010

Residents observe the eruption of Mount Sinabung from their village in Tanah Karo in North Sumatra on Monday. Airlines have been warned to avoid the remote volcano after it spewed a vast cloud of smoke and ash high into the air for a second day after springing to life for the first time in four centuries on Sunday. (AFP Photo/Sutanta Aditya)   

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Kabanjahe, Indonesia. Hundreds of the many thousands of people who have crowded into evacuation centers seeking protection from Mount Sinabung in North Sumatra have begun to complain of illness.

“I have a constant headache and stomachache,” Maranata, an internally displaced person, told Metro TV.

As the number of people seeking shelter passed 20,000, a number also reported that they were suffering from stress amid concerns about their property and crops and the possibility of further eruptions.

At least one person is reported to have succumbed to respiratory problems and died.

The volcano spewed a vast cloud of smoke and ash high into the air on Monday, disrupting flights and sending thousands more people into temporary shelters, officials said.

Airlines were warned to avoid the volcano as it erupted for a second day after springing to life for the first time in four centuries on Sunday.

“It erupted again at 6:30 a.m. and lasted about 15 minutes. The smoke and ash reached at least 2,000 metres,” government volcanologist Agus Budianto said.

The eruption was bigger than on Sunday when Sinabung rumbled into action for the first time since 1600, adding its name to the list of 69 active volcanoes in the Southeast Asian archipelago. 

Aircraft were ordered to avoid the area but travellers to North Sumatra province were warned of possible delays, Transportation Ministry spokesman Bambang Ervan said.

“It may affect flight traffic to and from the province. It all depends on the direction of the wind,” he told AFP.

Several domestic flights had to be cancelled on Sunday due to the smoke, he said.

The number of people living in temporary shelters swelled by 3,000 to 21,000, disaster management official Andes Mbaga said.

Sixteen shelters have been set up to accommodate people who evacuated their villagers as ash and stones fell around the area early Sunday.

Witnesses said a strong smell of sulphur filled the air and many people fled their homes before receiving the order to evacuate. 

AFP/JG

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