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Indonesian Volcano Alert Lowered

Mount Gamkonora.

Rains clear up haze on Indonesian Borneo
Jakarta (AFP) July 16 - Rain has cleared a haze that has caused flight delays on the Indonesian portion of Borneo in recent days, an official said Monday. Pontianak, the capital of West Kalimantan province, had been shrouded in haze from land-clearing fires that herald the start of Indonesia's dry season. "It rained quite evenly across the province last night, and as a result the sky is clear today (Monday)," Muhammad Husin, from Pontianak's meteorology office, told AFP. He said morning visibility, which had been down to 600 metres (yards) since last Thursday, was now at eight kilometres (five miles). "An Adam Air airplane from Jakarta has already landed and I do not think we will see flights delays like we have had in the past days," Husin said. Airplanes in Indonesia require visibility of at least 800 metres to land independently. The haze is an annual problem, triggered by farmers burning their fields ahead of the planting season. Pollution from the fires typically spreads to Singapore and Malaysia, irking governments there.
by Staff Writers
Jakarta (AFP) July 16, 2007
Thousands of people who fled their homes around the slopes of a smouldering volcano in Indonesia were Monday told it was safe to return after authorities downgraded the alert status. Mount Gamkonora on the northeastern island of Halmahera was put on top alert last Tuesday, meaning experts believed an eruption could be imminent.

"We have downgraded the alert level because the seismic activity of the volcano has somehow grown much quieter, and there have only been fumes emitted from the crater," said Saud Situmorang from Indonesia's volcanology headquarters in Bandung.

He said the smoke curling from the crater was very weak, reaching just 50 to 100 metres (yards) high and the tectonic quakes registered were very small. Last week, smoke stretched four kilometres (2.5 miles) into the air.

"The weakening of the seismic activities of the volcano has been noticed since July 13," he said.

A statement on the volcanology office website said the downgrade meant "the displaced can return to their respective homes and conduct their daily activities as usual."

Nearly 9,000 people were evacuated from their homes around the arid slopes of Gamkonora to safe shelters in anticipation of a possible eruption.

The office said there was still a chance that the volcano could make small emissions of smoke or other material but any eruption would not be dangerous or reach settlements.

The effect of such a small eruption would not reach more than a radius of three kilometres from the peak of the mountain, it said.

Indonesia sits on the so-called "Pacific Ring of Fire" where continental plates meet, causing frequent volcanic and seismic activity.

Gamkonora, some 2,700 kilometres (1,600 miles) northeast of Jakarta, has erupted 12 times since records have been kept. It most recently sprang into action in 1987, but no casualties were reported.

Source: Agence France-Presse

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Indonesian Volcano Calms As Hundreds More Evacuated
Jakarta (AFP) July 12, 2007
Activity at a smouldering Indonesian volcano appeared to ease slightly Thursday as hundreds more people were evacuated from its arid slopes, geologists and officials said. Mount Gamkonora, a 1,635-metre (5,461-foot) high volcano on Halmahera island in North Maluku province has been spewing rocks, ash and smoke into the air since Monday and experts fear an eruption could be imminent.







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