Indonesia evacuates residents, shuts airport after Java volcano erupts

The Mount Merapi volcano, on densely populated Java island, is one of the most active in Indonesia and a series of eruptions in 2010 killed more than 350 people. (Reuters)
Updated 11 May 2018
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Indonesia evacuates residents, shuts airport after Java volcano erupts

JAKARTA: Indonesian authorities ordered people living near a volcano to leave their homes on Friday and a major city closed its airport after the 5,500-meter peak sent a column of steam and ash into the sky.
The Mount Merapi volcano on densely populated Java island is one of the most active in Indonesia and a series of eruptions in 2010 killed more than 350 people.
A disaster mitigation agency told residents living within a 5-kilometer radius of the mountain to move to shelters, agency spokesman Sutopo Purwo Nugroho said in a statement.
He said that 120 people who had been hiking up Merapi were safe.
The airport in Yogyakarta, the nearest big city to the volcano, shut because of the threat from the ash, the state-owned aviation agency AirNav said in a statement.
The disaster agency described Merapi’s latest eruption as phreatic, which means magma heats up ground water and vapor is released under pressure.
The alert status on Merapi had not be raised, it said.


Egypt 'won’t hesitate' to help preserve Sudan's unity

Updated 12 sec ago
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Egypt 'won’t hesitate' to help preserve Sudan's unity

  • Foreign Minister Badr Abdelatty says Cairo 'will not allow under any circumstances' collapse of its neighbor
  • Egypt supports the Sudanese army, which has been fighting the paramilitary RSF since April 2023
CAIRO: Egyptian Foreign Minister Badr Abdelatty said on Wednesday that Cairo would take all necessary measures to preserve Sudan’s unity, as the neighboring country approaches its fourth year of war between the army and its paramilitary rivals.
Speaking at a press conference with the UN secretary-general’s special envoy for Sudan, Ramtane Lamamra, Abdelatty said Egypt “will not stand idly by and will not hesitate to take the necessary measures in a way that preserves Sudan, its unity and territorial integrity.”
Egypt shares its southern border with Sudan, and is one of the closest allies of the Sudanese army, which has been fighting the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) since April 2023.
Abdelatty said that Egypt “will not accept and will not allow under any circumstances the collapse of Sudan, the collapse of Sudanese national institutions or harming the unity of Sudan.”
“These are red lines,” he continued, adding that “a violation to Sudan’s national security is a violation of Egypt’s national security.”
The foreign minister’s comments echoed remarks made by President Abdel Fattah El-Sisi during a meeting last month with Sudan’s army chief and de facto leader, Abdel Fattah Al-Burhan.
At the meeting, El-Sisi had also described any threat to Sudanese state institutions as a “red line for Egypt.”
A statement from his office added that Cairo reserved the “full right to take all necessary measures under international law,” including potentially activating a joint defense agreement.
Egypt and Sudan have a long-standing history of military cooperation. In March 2021, they signed an agreement covering training, border security and joint efforts against shared threats, building on a 1976 defense pact aimed at countering external dangers.