Eleven climbers have been found dead in Indonesia following the eruption of the Marapi volcano in West Sumatra, a rescue official says, as a search to find 12 more missing was temporarily halted over safety concerns.
Three survivors were found on Monday along with the bodies of the 11 climbers, who were among 75 people in the area at the time of Sunday’s eruption, search and rescue team spokesperson Jodi Haryawan said.
The 2891m-high volcano spewed ash as high as 3km into the sky on Sunday.
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Authorities raised the alert to the second-highest level and prohibited residents from going within 3km of the crater.
Video footage showed a huge cloud of volcanic ash spread widely across the sky, and cars and roads covered with ash.
A small eruption on Monday prompted the search to be suspended, Haryawan said.
“It’s too dangerous if we continue searching now,” he said.
There were 49 climbers evacuated from the area earlier on Monday and many were being treated for burns, he said.
Marapi is one of the most active volcanoes on Sumatra island.
Its most deadly eruption was in April 1979, when 60 people died.
This year, it erupted from January to February and was spewing ash about 75m to 1000m from the peak.
Indonesia sits on the Pacific’s so-called Ring of Fire and has 127 active volcanoes, according to the volcanology agency.