La Palma’s airport reopens but flights cancelled as volcano eruption continues

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La Palma’s airport reopens but flights cancelled as volcano eruption continues


Adds mass, pope comments, Pevolca comments

LA PALMA, Sept 26 (Reuters)The airport on the Spanish island of La Palma reopened on Sunday although flights remained cancelled as the volcano continued to spew lava and emit ash clouds over the surrounding area a week after it erupted.

Experts said on Sunday there were currently two active lava flows, one fast-moving flow to the north and a slower one to the south.

“We have a flow to the north that is moving quickly… this lava comes from more interior areas of the crater and its temperature is about 1,250 degrees [Celsius],” said Miguel Angel Morcuende, director of volcano response committee Pevolca, told a news conference on Sunday.

Reuters drone footage showed a rapid river of red hot lava flowing down the slopes of the crater, passing close to homes, and swathes of land and buildings engulfed by a black mass of slower-moving, older lava.

Morcuende said people who had been evacuated from Tacande de Arriba, Tacande de Abajo and Tajuya would be able to return to their homes.

Spain’s airport operator Aena AENA.MC said the airport had reopened after teams cleared ash off the runway. But Binter, the Canary Island airline saying it will keep flights cancelled today because of the conditions.

“The ash cloud originating from the volcanic eruption makes it necessary to maintain the temporary stoppage of flights to La Palma… The flights scheduled for today have been cancelled,” it said in a statement. “The stoppage will continue until conditions improve and allow flying, guaranteeing safety.”

Spanish media reported all flights would remain cancelled on Sunday.

On Sunday, Pope Francis sent “closeness and solidarity” to those affected by the eruption during his weekly blessing in St. Peter’s Square, while on La Palma churches held special masses for those affected.

“There are many people who are having a very bad time so we are praying for them,” said Magali Zarate, 49, from Mexico, after mass at the church of Colegio Sagrada Familia de Nazaret, where outside people swept away volcanic ash.

Zarate was on holiday on La Palma and was unable to return home because her flight was cancelled.

The Cumbre Vieja volcano, which began erupting last Sunday, entered a new explosive phase on Friday, experts said. The national Geographical and Mining Institute said on Saturday its drones had shown the volcano’s cone had broken.

The eruption has destroyed hundreds of houses and forced the evacuation of nearly 6,000 people since it began on Sept. 19.

“La Palma airport is back in operation. After progress in ash cleaning work, it can now be reopened,” Aena tweeted.

Travellers had been faced with cancelled flights on Saturday, and many had joined long queues at the port in the hope of getting a boat off the island.

On Sunday, ferry operator Fred Olsen Express said it would add an extra round trip between La Palma and Tenerife from Monday until Wednesday.

“Fred Olsen Express will increase connections… to continue meeting the demand for transport generated by the emergency situation caused by the volcanic eruption,” it said in a statement.

La Palma, with a population of over 83,000, is one of an archipelago making up the Canary Islands.

No fatalities or serious injuries have been reported in the volcano’s eruption, but about 15% of the island’s economically crucial banana crop could be at risk, jeopardising thousands of jobs.

(Reporting by Guillermo Martinez, Jon Nazca, Nacho Doce and Marco Trujillo in La Palma; Writing by Jessica Jones Editing by Raissa Kasolowsky and Emelia Sithole-Matarise)

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