Evacuation crackdown ordered as Philippine volcano seethes

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TANAUAN, Philippines, Jan 20, 2020 (BSS/AFP) – Philippine officials ordered
a crackdown Monday on people being allowed daily visits to the homes they
fled after Taal volcano erupted, citing threats it could still explode at any
time.

Over 110,000 people have taken refuge in evacuation centres since Taal
burst to life a week ago, but many hard-hit towns have permitted people in to
fetch items, feed livestock and clean up their houses.

“We are directing DRRMCs (civil defence officers)… not to allow anyone to
enter the danger zone,” said Epimaco Densing, undersecretary for the
Department of Interior.

“It’s dangerous, that’s why we have imposed a lockdown,” he told reporters.

The volcano shot ash 15 kilometres (nine miles) high in the January 12
eruption, which crushed scores of homes and killed livestock as well as
crops.

However, seismologists have warned the volcano could imminently unleash a
much bigger blast, putting at risk the lives of anyone in the 14-kilometre
(nine-mile) radius “danger zone” that surrounds it.

“The threat remains. It has not waned,” Renato Solidum, head of the
Philippines’ seismological agency, told reporters.

He said the volcano might be spewing less ash that it was a few days ago,
but the magma that would fuel a big eruption is still coursing toward it.

Until experts deem the threat has passed, the evacuees will need the
shelters spread across some 400 sites that range from school campuses to
covered basketball courts.

Authorities say they have so far been able to provide fundamental services
to the evacuees, including a place to sleep, eat and wash.

“We can handle the (current evacuee numbers). The issue is how are we going
to sustain resources over the longer term,” Alex Masiglat, spokesman for
disaster relief in the ground zero Calabarzon region.

“Our concern is how are we going to sustain a long term evacuation period,”
he added.

Though no people have been reported killed in the eruption, it has wrought
havoc on agriculture and tourism.

Taal is set in the middle of a picturesque that is a popular draw for
tourists, especially because it is a mere 60 kilometres south of the hot and
crowded capital Manila.