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| A photo courtesy of Michael Schade shows the volcano on New Zealand's White Island spewing steam and ash moments after it erupted (AFP Photo/Handout, Handout) |
New Zealand police have said no more survivors were expected to be rescued from an island volcano that erupted suddenly on Monday, suggesting as many as two dozen people could have died.
Police said
some 50 people were visiting White Island when it exploded in the early
afternoon -- hurling ash and rock high into the air.
Some 23
people made it off the island, five of whom have since died, the rest were
being treated for injuries, including severe burns.
It was
earlier estimated the number still on the island was in double digits.
Police said
early Tuesday that despite several aerial reconnaissance flights to try and
find those trapped "no signs of life have been seen at any point."
"Based
on the information we have, we do not believe there are any survivors on the
island. Police is working urgently to confirm the exact number of those who
have died."
As night
fell, deputy commissioner John Tims said volcanic activity made a rescue
attempts by land too dangerous.
"I've
got to consider the safety of our people and emergency services staff," he
said.
The New Zealand
military is expected to make a pass of the island at first light in the hope
that people may have survived against the odds.
The
eruption occurred just after 2pm (0100 GMT), thrusting a thick plume of white
ash 3.6 kilometres (12,000 feet) into the sky.
Seconds
before, live camera feeds showed a group of more than a half dozen people
walking on the crater floor. Then the images went black.
A
"considerable number" of those caught up in the disaster are believed
to be Australian, according to officials in Canberra.
As many as
30 of those involved are also believed to be cruise passengers on a day trip
from the vessel Ovation of the Seas, Kevin O'Sullivan, chief executive officer
of industry body the New Zealand Cruise Association told AFP.
The ship's
operator Royal Caribbean -- who had billed the trip to White Island as "an
unforgettable guided tour of New Zealand's most active volcano" -- said
"a number of our guests were touring the island" but did not confirm
that number.
The ship
has a capacity of around 4,000 people and set sail from Sydney last week on a
12 day voyage.
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This
handout photograph courtesy of Michael Schade shows wreckage of a
helicopter
amid ash minutes after the volcano erupted (AFP Photo/Handout)
|
Scene of
terror
Tourist
Michael Schade, made it off the island just in time and was able to capture
footage of the devastation.
His videos
showed groups of startled tourists clustered by the shoreline, waiting to be
evacuated as the ground around them smouldered, the sky filled with white
debris. An ash-caked helicopter lay damaged nearby.
Volcanic
Air said they had landed a helicopter on the island shortly before the eruption
carrying four visitors and one pilot. All were now accounted for.
"It
had landed on the island. What happened after that we don't know, but we know
that all five made it back to Whakatane on one of the tourist boats," a
company spokesman told AFP.
Guillaume
Calmelet, the co-director of Skydive Tauranga, saw the eruption from above as
he took a customer on a tandem skydive from a plane 12,000 feet above the Bay
of Plenty.
"As
soon as the parachute opened there was this huge cloud that was really
different to whatever we've seen before," he told AFP. "I could see
it coming out in freefall, so probably about 30 seconds for the whole cloud to
form, if that. It was pretty quick."
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Map locating
an erupting volcano in New Zealand. (AFP Photo)
|
The
country's National Emergency Management Agency described the eruption as
"moderate", although the plume of ash was clearly visible from the
mainland and from satellites flying overhead.
White
Island -- - also known as Whakaari -- is about 50 kilometres (30 miles)
offshore in the picturesque Bay of Plenty and is popular with adventurous
tourists willing to don hard hats and gas masks.
It is New
Zealand's most active volcano cone and about 70 percent of it is underwater,
according to government-backed agency GeoNet.
Around
10,000 people visit the volcano every year. It has erupted frequently over the
last half-century, most recently in 2016.
In August
of that year the New Zealand Defence Force airlifted a 2.4-tonne shipping
container onto the island to serve as an emergency shelter in case of an
eruption.




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