La Palma residents told to lock down as volcano lava pours into sea

La Palma residents told to lock down as volcano lava pours into sea
# 29 September 2021 14:26 (UTC +04:00)

Authorities in Spain's Canary Islands told residents on the western coast of La Palma to seal doors and windows with tape and wet towels to ward off toxic gases spewed by lava from the Cumbre Vieja volcano as it reached the sea, APA reports citing Reuters.

Incandescent lava gushing from the volcano for 10 days poured down a cliff into the sea early on Wednesday in the Playa Nueva area near the town of Tazacorte. read more

As day broke, red hot lava protruded above the Atlantic Ocean waterline, sending clouds of steam and toxic gases into the sky. Smoke clouds billowed from the volcano and the molten rock as it flowed down Cumbre Vieja's western flank.

"All the people in a 2-km radius have been evacuated" and a wider area is in lockdown, TazacorteMayor Juan Miguel Rodriguez Acosta told TV3 channel, adding that no further evacuations had been needed so far as the cloud was moving east.

He said all roads to the southern part of the islands had been cut off by the lava.

The Canary Islands' emergency service urged those outdoors less than 3.5 km from the stricken area to immediately find a safe place to shelter. No injuries have been reported.

The emergency services also told people to protect their mouths and noses with a wet cloth.

Since the eruption began on Sept. 19, lava has engulfed almost 600 houses as well as banana plantations in La Palma, which neighbours Tenerife in the Canary Islands off the North African coast.

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