Residents flee El Salvador volcanic blast (AP) Updated: 2005-10-02 10:54
PALO CAMPANA, El Salvador - A volcano in western El Salvador erupted on
Saturday, sending a column of ash 50,000 feet into the air and killing two
farmers buried by chunks of earth and boiling water that tumbled down the
slopes.
El Salvador's Ilamatepeq volcano is seen
spewing gases from its crater in this September 17, 2005 file photo.
Authorities evacuated hundreds of people living on the slopes of a volcano
in western El Salvador on October 1, 2005 after it spat large rocks and
ash from its crater during an early morning explosion.
[Reuters] | Authorities ordered the evacuation of three communities in the shadow of the
Ilamatepec volcano, which towers near Santa Ana, the country's second largest
city, 40 miles from San Salvador, the capital.
"The volcano has entered an eruptive phase that consists of ashes and gases,"
Interior Secretary Rene Figueroa said.
It was unclear how many people had been ordered to leave their homes.
Figueroa said as many as 10,000 residents live close to the volcano, but that
most areas were not evacuated.
Emergency response officials said two farmers died and two other residents of
the coffee-growing town of Palo Campana were missing.
The ground was smoldering when soldiers arrived to assist in the evacuations.
Falling ash had destroyed coffee crops and damaged trees in surrounding forests.
Small bodies of water were steaming and bubbling from the heat and ash
covered the ground as far as the eye could see. Problems with landslides
worsened as afternoon rains pelted the area.
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