The ash and debris that Indonesia’s Mount Kelud blasted from its belly brought death and misery, and disrupted international air traffic. But for many of the millions of people cleaning up in the wake of the explosive eruption, it was also a money earner and a shot of life for their crops.
“This is a blessing of the disaster,” said Imam Choiri, a farmer who was scraping up the ash from the road to use as fertilizer on his small vegetable plot a few kilometers from the crater of the rumbling mountain. Choiri said locals believe the ash helps drive away pests from crops.
The eruption of the 1,731-meter-high mountain on Java island late Thursday was one of the most dramatic to hit Indonesia in recent years, with ash falling as far as 600 kilometers away.
Four people, including a 97-year-old woman, were killed when the roofs of their homes caved in under the weight of ash. More than 100,000 people were evacuated to temporary shelters.
On Saturday, scientists said Kelud’s activities were dying down, in line with its reputation as a mountain that blows its top dramatically but then quickly settles down for another 10 years or so. But authorities warned that water from its crater, along with rain, could bring deadly landslides of fresh ash and rocks down river beds into villages and valleys.
Army troops enforced a ban on people returning to houses within 10 kilometers of the volcano, but many people sneaked back to check on livestock and clean up. Authorities were finding it hard to prevent people from returning, given the money farmers stand to lose by staying away, and said about 56,000 people remained in 89 shelters.
“Our cows need to be milked. If they aren’t, they can get sick and die,” said Marjito, who was riding on a motorbike with his wife to his village around 5 kilometers from the crater.
“We have so much work to do, including running and hiding from security officers,” said his wife, Dinayah. Like many Indonesians, both go by a single name.
Volcanic ash and debris are also prized in the building industry because they make especially strong cement, and sand diggers can charge almost twice as much per load than they can for regular sand. Scores of diggers were collecting the fresh, easy-to-dig sand, packing the windfall into bags or onto trucks.
“Kelud is a valuable source of livelihood to me and my family,” Harjito Huda, a sand miner from Ngancar village, said.
Transportation Ministry spokesman Bambang Ervan said that the Juanda international airport in the country’s second-largest city, Surabaya, resumed operation late Saturday along with three others in Malang, Semarang and Cilacap.
A total of seven airports on Java - Indonesia’s most densely populated island and home to more than half of the country’s 240 million people - had been closed because of ash on the runway and on planes.
Three other airports in Bandung, Solo and Yogyakarta are scheduled to reopen later Sunday or Tuesday at the latest, Ervan said. The Darwin, Australia-based Volcanic Ash Advisory Center informed that the conditions in Indonesia are safe for airlines, he said.
President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono left the capital, Jakarta, on a 10-hour train trip to East Java to visit the devastated areas.

Indonesian volcano brings life as well as death

A man wears a mask as he rides a becak, a kind of rickshaw, on a road covered with from Mount Kelud, in Yogyakarta on Feb. 14, 2014. (Reuters)
The Associated Press, Sidomulyo
Sunday 16 February 2014
Last Update: Wednesday, 20 May 2020 KSA 09:42 - GMT 06:42
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