Tens of thousands of people fled the eastern DR Congo city of Goma on Thursday, choking highways, after the local governor warned in a dawn broadcast of a possible new eruption of the volcano Mount Nyiragongo.
In a technical note seen by AFP, the volcano’s monitors also pointed to a potentially catastrophic scenario — a “limnic eruption” that could smother the area with suffocating carbon dioxide.
The city, located on the shore of Lake Kivu, has been on edge since Africa’s most active volcano erupted on Saturday, leaving 32 people dead.
“Right now we can’t rule out an eruption on land or under the lake, which could happen very soon and without warning,” said General Constant Ndima, the military governor of North Kivu province.
He said an evacuation of part of the city of more than 600,000 — among some two million in the greater urban area — had been ordered, and urged residents to leave calmly.
Ndima, warning that “the situation can change rapidly, and is being constantly monitored,” said authorities had arranged transport towards Sake, around 20 kilometres (12 miles) west of Goma.
But Agnes Kahindo, trying to make her way to Sake, said: “We don’t see these means to leave Goma. There are too many traffic jams, and the price of motorbike taxis has shot up.”
Traffic was backed up for several kilometres on the road headed west, an AFP reporter said.
One Goma resident said: “It’s fear, it’s panic, everyone is fleeing!”
Another resident, Alliance Kimony, said: “No one seems in control of the situation. We are afraid the volcano can rise up at any time in any place… It’s better to leave.”
The communication ministry backed Ndima’s warnings in a statement from Kinshasa, saying: “The persistent threat of eruption and repeated seismic tremors obligate the government to activate a phased evacuation plan as soon as possible.”
Tens of thousands of residents fled Goma last weekend after Nyiragongo erupted on Saturday night, but many returned.
But strong aftershocks have continued to rattle the city, causing some buildings to collapse and leaving residents fearful.
The volcano spewed out two rivers of molten rock during the eruption, one of which came to halt on the edge of Goma after obliterating villages in its wake.
The UN humanitarian agency OCHA said more than 4,500 homes were destroyed, affecting some 20,000 people.
Local volcanologists have recorded hundreds of aftershocks since Nyiragongo, which sits just a dozen kilometres (eight miles) from Goma, roared back to life.
Ndima said the latest data “indicates the presence of magma under the urban area of Goma, with an extension under Lake Kivu.”
The governor said the interaction between magma and the lake posed additional risks, including “the emission of potentially dangerous gases at the surface”.
“In anticipation of this possible catastrophe, the evacuation is mandatory,” he said.
“People should take the bare minimum with them, to make sure everyone has a chance to get on,” he added.
In the technical note seen by AFP, the Goma Volcano Observatory (OVG) warned of a possible worst-case scenario in which an eruption occurs beneath the floor of Lake Kivu.
This could cause carbon dioxide dissolved in the lake’s depths to rise to the surface, releasing invisible clouds of suffocating gas.
In a “limnic eruption” of this kind in 1986, more than 1,700 people and thousands of cattle died in Lake Nyos, in Cameroon.
Tens of thousands of people immediately headed towards the Rwandan border, an AFP correspondent said.
Vehicles of all kinds, including cars full of families, vans and trucks, waited to cross into Rwanda, mainly to the city of Gisenyi with a population of some 90,000.
Goma’s streets were jammed with people walking or running, carrying mattresses, sports bags or a few meagre possessions in plastic bags, and holding on to frightened children.
People were also massing at Goma’s Lake Kivu port hoping to board a boat to Bukavu, to the south. But the authorities, probably fearing overcrowding and possible capsizing, barred lake traffic on Thursday.
Thousands more headed north towards Rutshuru, making their way on foot because the road was made impassable by a lava flow.
A so-called strato-volcano nearly 3,500 metres (11,500 feet) high, Nyiragongo straddles the East African Rift tectonic divide.
Its last major eruption, in 2002, claimed around 100 lives.
The deadliest eruption on record killed more than 600 people in 1977.
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