Indonesia volcano forces mass evacuation, shuts Bali airport
Mount Agung

Canadians among 60,000 travellers stranded in Indonesia after volcano eruption

BALI — Some Canadians are trapped in Bali after Indonesian authorities ordered 100,000 people to flee from an erupting volcano that has prompted the closure of the international airport.

Among them is Chantal Desjardins, a Montreal-based media personality and standup comic who was due to fly out Tuesday.

Desjardins tells The Canadian Press that local reports suggest the biggest eruption is yet to come, so the situation is “getting a little bit real now.”

She’s at a hotel about 70 kilometres away, so there’s no word on evacuating her area for now.

Desjardins says according to her airline, the earliest she’ll be able to leave is Dec. 5.

Mount Agung has been hurling clouds of white and dark grey ash about 3,000 metres into the atmosphere since the weekend and lava is welling up in the crater, sometimes reflected as a reddish-yellow glow in the ash plumes.

What travellers need to know

WHAT HAPPENED?

Ash from the volcano reached the Bali airport’s airspace, triggering its closure early Monday. More than 400 flights to and from Bali’s airport were cancelled and nearly 60,000 travellers have been stranded. Travel disruptions will ripple around the globe as the island is one of Asia’s top destinations, attracting 5 million visitors a year. December through the first week of January is one of the island’s busy periods. The airport’s initial closure is for 24 hours until early Tuesday but there could be prolonged or repeated disruptions because the volcano may spew ash for weeks or have even bigger eruptions.

TRAPPED IN PARADISE?

Travellers can still leave Bali, though probably at significant cost, by taking a ferry from Gilimanuk port to Banyuwangi on Java island to the west and then travelling by car, train or plane to the Indonesian capital Jakarta for international connections. Another possible route is a ferry to the neighbouring island of Lombok and then a flight to Java though ash temporarily closed Lombok’s airport on Sunday and there could be further closures. The government says it has provided 100 buses to transport people from the international airport to ferry ports. Alternatively, visitors could wait to see if the airport reopens though there’s likely to be long waiting lists for flights when it does. Indonesia’s tourism ministry said member hotels of the Indonesia Hotel and Restaurant Association will provide a night’s free accommodation to guests affected by the airport closure.

HEADING TO BALI

Some governments are advising citizens to defer travel to the island. Malaysia’s foreign ministry said all but non-urgent travel should be delayed while Australia, a big source of tourists for Bali, said people should be aware that ash clouds could also close other airports in Indonesia depending on weather conditions. A spokesman for major Japanese travel bureau JTB Corp. said all tours set to depart Monday from Japan were cancelled because of the airport closure. Yoshimi Tajima said some people can’t change their travel dates and are switching to other destinations while others are changing the dates. “What will happen from tomorrow is still unclear,” she said.

LOCAL CONDITIONS

The popular tourist areas of Kuta and Seminyak and the airport are about 70 kilometres (43 miles) from the volcano and largely safe even with a major eruption though masks and goggles could prove necessary if there’s significant ash fall. Authorities have ordered 100,000 people to leave a danger zone that extends 10 kilometres (6 miles) from the crater in places and tourists shouldn’t enter it. The area, which includes a much-visited Hindu temple on the slopes of the volcano, will be prone to deadly mudflows and lava. The risk of mudflows, which combine water and volcanic debris, is high because it’s the wet season in Bali. Authorities have warned people to stay away from rivers.

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