Indonesian workers abandon plantations near volcano
Authorities are evacuating residents living within a 10-km (6 mile) zone around the 1,731-metre (5,712-foot) volcano to safer areas, as experts have warned Mount Kelud was liable to erupt.
The order to evacuate more than 100,000 people was made after an alert on one of the country's deadliest volcano, 675 km (420 miles) east of the capital Jakarta but only 90 km southwest of Indonesia's second-largest city of Surabaya, was raised to maximum last week.
Yohannes Slamet, the director of PT Tjandi Sewu, whose 650-hectare plantation area lies just 5 km from the volcano, said the firm had been forced to stop production even though it was harvest season for coffee and cloves.
"We are incurring daily losses of 4.6 million rupiah ($503.5) for halting production, while having to continue paying the salaries of 70 employees and 400 contract workers," Slamet told the Jakarta Post.
But some of Slamet's contract workers defied warnings and continues to work during the day to return to the shelter at night.
An estimated 350,000 people live within 10 km of the volcano, growing coffee, sugar cane, pineapples and papayas in the rich volcanic soil.
When it last erupted in 1990 at least 30 people were killed, while in 1919 about 5,000 died as Kelud ejected scalding water from its crater lake.
Indonesia, which sits on a belt of intense seismic activity known as the Pacific Ring of Fire, has had a series of major volcanic eruptions over the centuries. ($1 = 9,135 rupiah)
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