Footage has emerged showing residents fleeing after a volcano eruption in Indonesia sent smoke and ash flying 40,00ft up in the air.
Locals scrambled to escape after the Semeru volcano on the east of Java island began spewing out clouds of smoke and ash.
No casualties or damage to buildings have been reported, the Indonesian disaster agency (BNPB) said.
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— jogjaupdate.com (@JogjaUpdate) December 4, 2021
BPBD Provinsi Jatim dan BPBD Lumajang telah menuju lokasi untuk melakukan assesment dan evakuasi warga di sekitar Gunung Semeru. Silahkan mention jika ada yang dilokasi@PRB_BNPB pic.twitter.com/DYj8qIW23u
Videos show local residents running as a huge plume of towering smoke and ash blankets nearby villages in the East Java province.
Thoriqul Haq, a local official, told Reuters that a road and bridge connecting the area to the nearby city of Malang had been severed.
“This has been a very pressing, rapid condition since it erupted,” he said, adding that evacuations are underway.
A resident living in a nearby village posted a photo of the eruption on social media, writing; “Friends, please pray for me, I hope my family is fine, Just now, it’s really bursting.”
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— jogjaupdate.com (@JogjaUpdate) December 4, 2021
Mt semeru @dwi_fatoni pic.twitter.com/RTpTSzYnSS
The 3,676-meter (12,060-foot) Semeru had last erupted in January, with no casualties. It is among Indonesia’s nearly 130 active volcanoes.
Indonesia, an archipelago of more than 270 million people, is prone to earthquakes and volcanic activity because it sits along the Pacific “Ring of Fire,” a horseshoe-shaped series of fault lines.