Philippines President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo yesterday visited villagers forced to flee their homes due to the restive Mayon volcano and ordered officials to speed up efforts to improve conditions at cramped evacuation centers.
Scientists told Arroyo in a briefing that Mayon, the Philippines' most active volcano, appears to be gearing up for an explosive eruption since it began quietly oozing lava four weeks ago.
Following successive ash explosions on Monday, officials ordered a mass evacuation of villages on the southern and southeastern slopes of the volcano, which are the most vulnerable to a violent eruption.
More than 40,000 people have been evacuated to schools, where villagers complained of overcrowding.
shelter and sanitation
Arroyo told officials to immediately deliver prefabricated shelters and portable toilets to ease the congestion and assure sanitation.
"Why make them live in shanties? We have money for better things," she said.
She shook hands with some of the evacuees at Legazpi city's Bagumbayan Elementary School, as others cheered and applauded. She also distributed bags of relief supplies that included blankets, canned goods, soap and toothpaste.
"We are happy that she came here," said Alma Rana, a 29-year-old mother of four. "It's uncomfortable here, the toilet facilities are inadequate and we lack water."
Dozens of people are packed into and sleep on the concrete floor of schoolrooms that normally seat about 40 pupils. During school hours, the evacuees stay in tents outside or remain in the school corridors.
Provincial Governor Fernando Gonzalez said a major eruption could increase the number of evacuees by 20,000.
A train loaded with packages of used clothes and boxes of luncheon meat arrived on Friday in Legazpi, the capital of Albay Province, and one of the towns at the foot of the 2,462m volcano.
Mayon, about 340km southeast of Manila, is known for its perfect cone.
`hazardous' eruption
Renato Solidum, chief of the Philippine Institute of Volcanology and Seismology, said there have been 18 ash explosions since Monday, when the agency declared alert Level 4 -- the second highest of a five-step volcano warning system that suggests a "hazardous" eruption within days.
Solidum said that clouds of extremely hot gas, ash and debris called pyroclastic flows that roll down the slopes of the volcano at high speed during an eruption might be contained within a 6km zone from the crater. The "danger zone" has been extended up to 8km on the mountain's southeastern flanks.
"The volume[of lava] and the explosivity will be less than 1814," Solidum said, referring to the year of the volcano's deadliest eruption, when lava flowed up to 10km down the slope, burying an entire town and killing more than 1,200 people.
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