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Rescuers brave scalding ash as Guatemala volcano toll rises

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Rescuers brave scalding ash as Guatemala volcano toll rises Empty Rescuers brave scalding ash as Guatemala volcano toll rises

Post by Harry Fri Jun 15, 2018 11:38 am

Rescuers brave scalding ash as Guatemala volcano toll rises

By Susannah Cullinane, Holly Yan and Flora Charner, CNN

Updated 0805 GMT (1605 HKT) June 5, 2018


Danger looms after...
Source: CNN
Danger looms after Guatemala volcano eruption 02:54
(CNN)Rescuers braved scalding ash and the risk of mudslides and more explosions to retrieve survivors and dead bodies as the death toll from Guatemala's Fuego volcano eruption rises.
At least 69 people were killed after the volcano erupted Sunday, spewing a river of lava and plumes of smoke almost six miles into the air, according to Guatemala's Institute of Forensic Sciences. 17 dead bodies have been identified.
At least 15 people have been hospitalized, including 12 children, some of whom suffered severe burns, the health ministry said.



Boris Rodriguez, 24, who is searching for his wife, cries after seeing the condition of his neighborhood, destroyed by the erupting Volcan de Fuego.
Volcanic ash has covered a 12-mile radius, with officials warning that winds could further extend its lethal reach.
More than 3,100 people have been evacuated and 1.7 million people have been affected by the eruption, according to CONRED, a government disaster agency.
Satellite footage of Fuego shows the massive dark gray eruption was visible from space.


Rescuers search for victims in San Miguel Los Lotes, a village in Escuintla Department, about 35 kilometers southwest of Guatemala City.
Guatemala's President Jimmy Morales has declared three days of national mourning.
The disaster area continues to witness horrific scenes with survivors waiting to hear news of family members buried under the deluge.
"Not everyone escaped, I think they were buried," said survivor Consuelo Hernandez as she waited to learn of her family's fate.
"We saw the lava was pouring through the corn fields and we ran toward a hill," Hernandez added, speaking in a video released by CONRED.

Images from the scene showed a firefighter weeping over the devastation.
"Basically there's no houses left, and to my assumption there's nobody left there ... except the people doing the search and rescue," said Diego Ibarguen, who works for a firefighter support organization.
"The sad news is there's a bunch of bodies of children and adults there," he added.


Police officers carry a wounded man after the eruption of the Fuego Volcano, in El Rodeo village.
Ixmucane Monsanto, a volunteer firefighter, said conditions were making it very difficult to mount rescue operations, even where rescuers knew families are buried under the ash.
"It's very unstable ground to walk on," she said. "The moment you step in, you have to have your mask and whole equipment to not put yourself at risk.
Mario Cifuentes, also a volunteer firefighter, said that the soles of some firefighters' boots had been torn off because of the heat. Breathing was difficult, he said.
1.7 million people affected


A Monday photo shows ongoing volcanic activity at Fuego.
The eruption officially ended late Sunday, said Guatemala's National Institute of Seismology, Vulcanology, Meteorology and Hydrology.
"The eruption ... is reaching its end with 14.763 feet of ash and weak-to-moderate explosions and incandescence in its crater," it said in a statement.
But it warned there could be new eruptions, and residents in the surrounding areas should be on alert for mudslides containing volcanic material.
Why this eruption is much deadlier than Hawaii's


Why Guatemala's eruption is so much deadlier than Hawaii's
The Guatemala eruption stirred recent memories of Hawaii's Kilauea eruption, which terrorized Big Island on May 3.
But the Fuego eruption is much deadlier -- for several reasons.
Unlike the Hawaii volcano, which has destroyed homes with slow-moving lava, the Fuego volcano unleashed fast-moving pyroclastic flow -- a highly dangerous mix of ash, rock and volcanic gases that can be much more lethal than lava.
Pyroclastic flows can race down a volcano at hundreds of kilometers per hour.
To make matters worse in Guatemala, "villages are right on the foothills of the mountain," CNN meteorologist Ivan Cabrera said. "So they had no time (to escape)."
'Ring of fire'
Guatemala is situated on the "Ring of Fire," an area of intense seismic activity.
The 40,000-kilometer (25,000-mile) area stretches from the boundary of the Pacific Plate and the smaller plates such as the Philippine Sea plate to the Cocos and Nazca Plates that line the edge of the Pacific Ocean.


What is the Ring of Fire?
Volcan de Fuego, which means fire volcano, is one of Central America's most active.
It is near the colonial city of Antigua. Sunday's explosion rained soot over the popular tourist destination and other villages in the Sacatepéquez state, covering them in ash.
Villages south of the volcano in the Escuintla department were affected, too, said Sergio García Cabañas, director of the disaster agency. Some ash reached the capital of Guatemala City about 25 miles away, forcing the closure of its international airport. The Guatemalan army shared images of officers clearing the runway with push brooms.

Mexican President Enrique Peña Nieto expressed condolences and offered assistance.
"All our solidarity and support to President Jimmy Morales and the Guatemalan people for the loss of human life after the eruption of the volcano of Fire."
The President of El Salvador offered his condolences via Twitter and said his country stood ready to assist its neighbor.
CNNE's Michelle Mendoza and Kiarinna Parisi and CNN's Emanuella Grinberg, Claudia Dominguez, Judson Jones and Samantha Beech contributed to this report.

Harry
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