Signal, No Noise

August 29, 2010

Thousands flee as long-sleepy Sumatra volcano erupts

Filed under: Asia,Indonesia,South East Asia — mungurk @ 08:10

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JAKARTA (Reuters) – Thousands of Indonesians were evacuated from the slopes of a volcano on Sunday after it erupted for the first time in more than 400 years, spewing out lava and sending smoke and dust 1,500 metres (5,000 feet) into the air.

Mount Sinabung, in the north of the island of Sumatra, began erupting around midnight after rumbling for several days, prompting some villagers to panic before the mass evacuation got under way.

Indonesia is on the so-called Pacific Rim of Fire, an arc of volcanoes and geological fault lines triggering frequent earthquakes around the Pacific Basin. The eruption triggered the highest red volcano alert.

Two people died, one from breathing problems and the other from a heart attack, and two suffered injuries in road accidents as trucks, ambulances and buses were mobilised in the rescue operation.

“This is the first time since 1600 that Sinabung has erupted and we have little knowledge in terms on its eruptive patterns,” said Surono, head of Indonesia’s vulcanology centre.

Authorities took at least 12,000 people from high risk areas on the slopes of the 2,460-metre volcano to temporary shelters. Local TV showed showed women and children wearing face masks in cramped tents.

The area around the volcano is largely agricultural.

“Since this is the first eruption we’ve had in Sinabung, we’re anticipating residents to remain at the shelters for at least a week while waiting for further status alert,” said Priyadi Kardono, a spokesman at the national disaster management agency.

Residents panicked when the volcano started erupting overnight and some of them who live in safer areas chose to take refugee at shelters, Kardono added.

The eruption has not damage roads or bridges. The nearest big city is Medan where there were no disruptions to flights.

(Reporting by Karima Anjani; Editing by Nick Macfie)

June 4, 2010

Indonesia Sees Danger in Upcoming Obama Visit

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Indonesian anti-terror chief sees danger in Obama’s visit

  • Published: 3/06/2010 at 11:52 PM
  • Online news: Asia

Indonesia’s counter-terrorism chief Police Colonel Mohammed Tito Karanvian delivers his address before the Jakarta foreign correspondents forum in Jakarta. Karnavian said extremists could try to disrupt a planned visit by US President Barack Obama this month, although there was no evidence of a direct threat.

Police Colonel Mohammed Tito Karanvian said security forces had recently shattered a major new cell in the Muslim-majority country, the scene of repeated attacks including the 2002 Bali bombings which killed 202 people.

The group had targeted Westerners in Aceh province in the lead-up to Obama’s visit, which was initially scheduled for March, and some of its leaders were still on the loose, he said at a lunch with reporters.

“For the current plan of the visit by Obama we haven’t got any new information on a plot, but we need to pay attention and be very careful. Why? Because some of them remain at large,” Karnavian said.

“The idea was already there in February. We’re not really sure if the idea has already been deleted or not.”

The chief of the Detachment 88 anti-terror squad said police had arrested 61 terrorists and killed 13 since discovering the new cell’s training camp in Aceh in March, he said.

The Aceh cell was linked to the Jemaah Islamiyah regional terror network and other extremist groups bent on creating an Islamic caliphate across Southeast Asia, and inspired by Al-Qaeda’s ideology of “holy war”.

“This group, this network, has already attacked, we have at least four incidents against Western interests in Aceh,” Karnavian said.

“They had a plot during Obama’s visit to Jakarta (in March) to attack Banda Aceh,” he added, referring to the Aceh capital.

A bomb was thrown at a UN office in Banda Aceh late last year, a German aid worker was shot in November and a house shared by two US teachers was sprayed with gunfire in the same month. There were no fatalities in the incidents.

Obama spent four years of his childhood in Jakarta and his visit has been highly anticipated in his old home town.

The administration has still not confirmed a new arrival date, but the White House said Wednesday the trip would go ahead this month despite speculation it could be delayed again, this time over the BP oil spill.

November 16, 2009

Indonesia Will Deport 11 Foreign Greenpeace Activists

Filed under: Asia,Indonesia,South East Asia,Terrorism — mungurk @ 10:31

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November 15, 2009

Indonesia Will Deport 11 Foreign Greenpeace Activists

Indonesian authorities say they are deporting 11 foreign Greenpeace activists for joining a protest against forest destruction.
Immigration official Jumanter Lubis said Saturday the activists violated their tourist visas and are being sent home.

The environmental activists from Spain, Brazil, Germany, Thailand and the Philippines sought to draw attention to the massive destruction of peatland forests ahead of a key UN climate conference in Denmark.

The group entered land owned by PT Riau Andalan Pulp and Paper, one of Indonesia’s largest paper companies, on Thursday. Police said 44 Indonesian activists were questioned and 21 charged.

Indonesia’s once abundant forests are being cut down at a rapid rate, threatening endangered wildlife.

Associated Press

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