Thousands of tourists are flocking to the Philippines' volatile Mayon volcano with many even risking their lives to get close to the spectacular flowing lava, authorities said Wednesday.
Thousands of tourists are flocking to the Philippines' volatile Mayon volcano with many even risking their lives to get close to the spectacular flowing lava, authorities said Wednesday.
Governor Joey Salceda, whose province of Albay includes Mayon, said 2,400 tourists a day had been pouring into the area since the famously active volcano started oozing lava on December 14, compared with about 200 a day before."All the hotels are fully booked, even the cheapest ones," Salceda told AFP.
He said that tourists typically only stayed overnight to view the crimson lava oozing from the volcano's crater in the dark.
"It is like a slow moving meteor show. You really feel awe when you see it."
However Salceda said many tourists were also slipping by security patrols to enter the eight-kilometre (five-mile) danger zone around Mayon to get a close-up experience of the slow-moving lava column.
"There are enough thrill-seekers and, when you combine them with some enterprising local guides, they find their way in," he said.
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Salceda warned that although the lava was slow-moving, there was still a danger from volcanic ash that could mix with rainwater to form a lethal, fast-moving mudflow.
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"It's a big problem. I think the first violation of the zero casualty (record) will be a dead tourist," said Salceda.
"At the moment of the eruption, the local guides will have better chance of getting out. The hapless tourist will be left behind."
Nearly 50,000 villagers living in Mayon's foothills have already been evacuated to areas outside the so-called "danger zone" this month, with troops posted at checkpoints to keep people from entering.
Government volcanologist July Sabit, part of the team monitoring Mayon, said Wednesday that the volcano appeared to be experiencing a lull and was not having ash explosions as in previous days.
"(But) the volcano is still restive. The lava flow still continues," he warned.
"It is still at alert level four," he said, meaning a major eruption could occur at any time.
The 2,460-metre (8,070-foot) volcano, which is famed for its near-perfect cone, has erupted 48 times in recorded history. In 1814, more than 1,200 people were killed as lava buried the town of Cagsawa.
Source-AFP
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