SANTIAGO, Chile(AP)
Police and soldiers cleared the last remaining people from the
shadow of a Chilean volcano on Thursday after a strong, overnight
explosion spewed glowing-hot rocks from its crater.
The week-old eruption at the Chaiten volcano has scattered ash
across a wide swath of South America, closing regional airports and
driving more than 7,000 people from their homes. Volcanologist Luis
Lara warned things could get worse.
"The worst that could happen is that the seismic activity
begins to increase, the explosions become greater and large domes
form that could collapse and produce pyroclastic flows," said
Lara, an expert with the government's Geological and Mining
Service.
Pyroclastic flows are blasts of volcanic material that can move
at great speed, destroying everything in their path.
Armed with a court order for people to leave an area within a
30-mile (50-kilometer) radius of the mountain, authorities forcibly
removed about 130 holdouts, mostly small farmers, who had refused
to abandon their livestock.
Defense Minister Jose Goni said the government requested the
court order "because the danger is clear, as the volcano
remains very active."
Geologists reported that explosions around midnight on Wednesday
hurled hot rock from the volcano.
On Thursday, Argentina's weather service said volcanic ash
had reached the capital of Buenos Aires and was turning the sky
"a grayish color," but not coating the ground. Such
conditions were expected to persist there and in several southern
provinces.
Two Argentine airlines, Austral and Aerolineas Argentinas,
canceled flights in a half-dozen cities as drifting ash and smoke
obscured visibility.
Chile's government said it has earmarked some US$10.6
million (euro6.8 million) in initial disaster funds to help victims
in the coming month. Officials are also helping to move hundreds of
head of livestock from the disaster zone, and promise to compensate
farmers for animals that are killed.
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