
Mount Merapi forced
 international airlines to cancel flights to nearby  airports for the first time Tuesday, as fiery lava lit the rumbling  mountain's cauldron and plumes of smoke blackened the sky.
Scientists warned, meanwhile, that the slow but deadly eruption could continue for weeks, like a "marathon, not a sprint."
No  casualties were reported in Mount Merapi's latest blasts, which came as  Indonesia struggled to respond to an earthquake-generated tsunami that  devastated a remote chain of islands. The two disasters unfolding in  separate parts of the country have killed nearly 470 people and strained  the government's emergency response network.
Indonesia, a vast  archipelago of 235 million people, is prone to earthquakes and volcanos  because it sits along the Pacific "Ring of Fire," a horseshoe-shaped  string of faults that lines the western and eastern Pacific.
Merapi  - one of 22 active earthquakes now on alert - has killed 38 people  since springing back to life just over a week ago, at times forcing the  temporary closure of two nearby airports.
Officials in  Yogyakarta, the gateway to the famed 9th-century Borobudur temples  visited by 1 million tourists a year, and nearby Solo, have cited poor  visibility and heavy ash on the runway.
Both airports were  running Tuesday, but Malaysia's budget airline AirAsia and Singapore's  SilkAir announced the temporary suspension of several international  flights because of the smoldering mountain, just 20 miles (30  kilometers) away.
There have been more than 10 large eruptions at  Merapi since the first big explosion on Oct. 26, including a violent  burst Monday that appeared to have eased pressure inside the crater by  creating a vent for magma to escape.
A series of three much smaller eruptions followed Tuesday.
"There's  no way of knowing for sure, of course," said Safari Dwiyono, who has  observed the mountain for more than 15 years. "But based on what we've  seen in the last few days, we're hoping there won't be a massive  explosion. It's looking like we're in for a marathon, not a sprint."
The  nearly 70,000 villagers evacuated from the area around Merapi's  once-fertile slopes - now blanketed by gray ash - have been told they  could be expected to stay in crowded government camps for at least three  more weeks.
More than 800 miles (1,300 kilometers) to the west,  meanwhile, a C-130 transport plane, six helicopters and four boats were  ferrying aid to the most distant corners of the Mentawai islands, where  last week's tsunami destroyed hundreds of homes, schools, churches and  mosques. The tsunami death toll stood Monday at 431, the National  Disaster Management Agency said.
President Susilo Bambang  Yudhoyono said relief efforts must be sped up, expressing dismay that it  took days for aid to reach the isolated islands, though he acknowledged  that violent storms were largely to blame.
The fault line that  spawned the killer wave - and the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami - is the  meeting point of the two of the Earth's dozen major plates, which have  been pushing against and under each other for millions of years, causing  huge stresses to build up.
The government has raised alert  levels of 21 other volcanos to the second- and third- highest levels in  the last two months because they have shown an increase in activity,  state volcanologists Syamsul Rizal said Monday.

That's twice the number usually on the government "watch" list.
from The Jakarta Post 
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