Thousands of people fled the fertile slopes of Indonesia's most dangerous 
volcano Saturday as glowing lava oozed down the side and ash and rock spewed 
from the mountaintop, leading authorities to warn that an eruption could come 
soon. 
 
 
   Lava flows from Indonesia's Merapi volcano 
 Saturday May 13, 2006 as seen from Bebung village about 20 km (12 miles) 
 outside Yogyakarta, the provincial capital of Central Java province 
 Indonesia. Officials raised the alert status of the Merapi volcano to the 
 highest level, meaning that an eruption is imminent, and thousands began 
 evacuating from its slopes.[AP] | 
Villages on 
Mount Merapi were left virtually empty. Women, children and the elderly filled 
buses and trucks to be driven to shelters set up at government buildings and 
schools in nearby towns on the island of Java.
Throughout the day, volcanic tremors shook the ground, some strong enough to 
send people running in fear. After nightfall, fiery magma from the volcano's 
cauldron lit up the bottoms of clouds above the nearly 9,700-foot peak, and 
cascades of bright red stones tumbled down the mountainside.
Many people already had evacuated from homes closest to Merapi's crater after 
the volanco recently emerged from several years of relative quiet, but 
authorities said as many as 7,000 living farther down the slopes had refused to 
go and leave behind precious livestock and crops.
It wasn't clear how many of those obeyed the government's evacuation order 
Saturday. Groups of men who sent their families away were seen chatting around 
fires to keep warm during the night, guarding their homes against looters.
Edi, a 30-year-old villager, said he would stay unless he received a clear 
signal from the mountain's spirits that an eruption was at hand.
"People around here believe that if Merapi is going to explode there will be 
a sign, a magical sign," he said, sitting on a mat sipping coffee. "Either it 
comes in a dream, or in the form of a hallucination."
Although most Indonesians are Muslim, many also follow animist beliefs and 
worship ancient spirits. Often at full moons, they trek to crater rims and throw 
in rice, jewelry and live animals to appease the volcanoes.
Merapi, about 250 miles east of Indonesia's capital, Jakarta, is one of at 
least 129 active volcanoes in the country, which lies along the Pacific "Ring of 
Fire" — a series of fault lines that feed volcanoes stretching from the Western 
Hemisphere through Japan and into Southeast Asia.
Merapi last erupted in 1994, sending out a cloud of searing gas that burned 
60 people to death. About 1,300 people were killed when it erupted in 1930.
One man who defied the order to evacuate, Baijo, 30, said he was not worried 
about the risks of staying behind.
"I am not afraid. This is normal. We are looking after the village. If not, 
thieves will come," he said.
Some farmers said they had not seen any volcanic activity themselves so 
decided to remain on their land despite being urged to leave by the revered 
Sultan Sri Hamengkubuwono, who is also the regional governor in Yogyakarta, a 
city of 1 million people just 11 miles from Merapi.
"We will not leave soon because of our livestock," said one cattle raiser, 
who declined to give his name.
All roads leading up the mountain were closed as chunks of glowing pumice 
blew from Merapi's depths into the sky and burning gas fumes wafted through the 
air.
Authorities put the area on highest alert after observing two days of steady 
lava flow from the volcano.
"Because there have been constant lava flows that cause hot gases, we have 
raised the status to the highest level," said Bambang Dwiyanto, head of the 
region's volcanology center.
Experts recorded 27 volcanic tremors and eruptions of at least 14 plumes of 
hot ash Saturday, said Dr. Ratdomo Purbo, who heads an observation post at 
Merapi. He said a stream of lava extended nearly a mile down the mountain's 
side.