Garuda cancels some flights as Indonesia’s Merapi erupts

Bloomberg

PT Garuda Indonesia, the country’s flag carrier, has cancelled 14 flights to Yogyakarta after a volcano about 19 miles north of the city erupted and forced authorities to close the local airport.
The airfield, 520 kilometres southeast of Jakarta on the island of Java, was closed at about 10:42 am on May 11 local time, and reopened at 2:17 pm, state air-navigation operator AirNav Indonesia said in a statement.
Mount Merapi’s eruptions are minor, caused by accumulation of volcanic gases, and shouldn’t lead to further outbursts, the Center for Volcanology and Geological Hazard Mitigation at the nation’s Energy and Mineral Resources Ministry, said in a statement, adding its status is “normal.” Other airlines that cancelled flights include those operated by the Lion Group.
Indonesia is located on the so-called Pacific Ring of Fire, an arc of volcanoes and geological fault lines surrounding the Pacific Basin. According to the Volcanological Survey of Indonesia, the archipelago has about 120 active volcanoes. It has had two of the world’s biggest volcanic eruptions in the past two centuries: Mount Tambora in 1815 and Krakatau in 1883. Last year, Mount Agung on the neighbouring island of Bali erupted and forced the airport at the popular holiday destination to close several times. Yogyakarta is also a prominent tourist spot for Buddhist pilgrims. The volcanic ash and gases spewed can be dangerous to planes passing through the plume.

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