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Evacuations from Bali volcano continue to swell

Click to play video: 'Bali’s rumbling volcano spurs more evacuations and travel warnings'
Bali’s rumbling volcano spurs more evacuations and travel warnings
WATCH ABOVE: Bali's rumbling volcano spurs more evacuations and travel warnings – Sep 27, 2017

BALI, Indonesia – Warnings that a volcano on the Indonesian tourist island of Bali will erupt have sparked an exodus of more than 75,000 people that is likely to continue to swell, the country’s disaster agency said Tuesday.

Authorities have ordered the evacuation of villagers living within a high danger zone that in places extends 12 kilometres (7.5 miles) from Mount Agung’s crater. But people further away are also leaving, said National Disaster Mitigation Agency spokesman Sutopo Purwo Nugroho.

The region is being shaken daily by hundreds of tremors from the mountain, which volcanologists say indicates a high chance of an eruption. Mount Agung last erupted in 1963, killing about 1,100 people.

READ MORE: Here’s what tourists should know about Mount Agung

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Evacuees are taking shelter at more than 370 sites across the island that include temporary camps, sport centres, village halls and the houses of friends and relatives.

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Villager Wayan Merta said he was among the first to evacuate last week because his village is just 6 kilometres (4 miles) from the summit.

“We have already sold our cattle, because we thought it was better than leaving them there for nothing,” he said.

“My feeling is the mountain will erupt,” he said. “But no one knows, we just pray.”

Sutopo said it was “natural” that people outside the immediate danger zone are leaving. More than 500,000 people evacuated when Mount Merapi in central Java erupted in 2010, more than double the population in the exclusion zone around that volcano, he said.

READ MORE: 5.5 magnitude earthquake hits Bali, Indonesia

In 1963, Agung hurled ash as high as 20 kilometres (12 miles) and remained active about a year. Lava travelled 7.5 kilometres (4.7 miles) and ash reached Jakarta, about 1,000 kilometres (620 miles) away.

The mountain, 72 kilometres (45 miles) to the northeast of the tourist hotspot of Kuta, is among more than 120 active volcanoes in Indonesia.

The country of thousands of islands is prone to seismic upheaval due to its location on the Pacific “Ring of Fire,” an arc of volcanoes and fault lines encircling the Pacific Basin.

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Associated Press writer Ali Kotarumalos in Jakarta, Indonesia, contributed to this report.

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