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Villagers eye Ecuador volcano after spectacular eruption

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Villagers and experts warily eyed an Ecuador volcano Saturday that spewed a 10-kilometer (six-mile) high column of ash a day earlier in a spectacular eruption.

"For now, the ash fall is mild," Ecuador's National Secretariat for Risk Management said on its Twitter account. It called activity at the volcano, which is 130 kilometers south of the capital Quito, "moderate to high."

But it admitted that "it is difficult to predict future behavior."

The Tungurahua volcano, which in the Quechua language means "throat of fire," expelled an impressive plume of ash and smoke on Friday, putting authorities and villagers on alert.

Visitors and locals in Banos, a tourist town on the slopes of the volcano, went about their business as usual and shops stayed open.

The Tungurahua volcano erupting is seen from Banos  Ecuador on April 4  2014
The Tungurahua volcano erupting is seen from Banos, Ecuador on April 4, 2014
Andres Reyes, AFP/File

Rocio Paspuesan, who works at the La Floresta Hotel, told AFP: "No ash has fallen. We didn't see much last night because it was overcast. The roads are open and people are going about their lives as usual."

Multiple villages are located in the vicinity of the volcano, which stands at 5,029 meters (16,500 feet) in central Ecuador.

In 2006, six people died in a village destroyed by lava from Tungurahua.

Tungurahua, which has been erupting since 1999, is one of eight active volcanoes in Ecuador, a country that is part of the so-called Pacific Ring of Fire that makes it prone to seismic and volcanic events.

Villagers and experts warily eyed an Ecuador volcano Saturday that spewed a 10-kilometer (six-mile) high column of ash a day earlier in a spectacular eruption.

“For now, the ash fall is mild,” Ecuador’s National Secretariat for Risk Management said on its Twitter account. It called activity at the volcano, which is 130 kilometers south of the capital Quito, “moderate to high.”

But it admitted that “it is difficult to predict future behavior.”

The Tungurahua volcano, which in the Quechua language means “throat of fire,” expelled an impressive plume of ash and smoke on Friday, putting authorities and villagers on alert.

Visitors and locals in Banos, a tourist town on the slopes of the volcano, went about their business as usual and shops stayed open.

The Tungurahua volcano erupting is seen from Banos  Ecuador on April 4  2014

The Tungurahua volcano erupting is seen from Banos, Ecuador on April 4, 2014
Andres Reyes, AFP/File

Rocio Paspuesan, who works at the La Floresta Hotel, told AFP: “No ash has fallen. We didn’t see much last night because it was overcast. The roads are open and people are going about their lives as usual.”

Multiple villages are located in the vicinity of the volcano, which stands at 5,029 meters (16,500 feet) in central Ecuador.

In 2006, six people died in a village destroyed by lava from Tungurahua.

Tungurahua, which has been erupting since 1999, is one of eight active volcanoes in Ecuador, a country that is part of the so-called Pacific Ring of Fire that makes it prone to seismic and volcanic events.

AFP
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With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

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