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A damaged area in Tonga’s Nuku’alofa following Saturday’s volcanic eruption and tsunami near the Pacific archipelago. Photo: Broadcom Broadcasting via AP

Tongan recounts deafening volcanic blast as thousands fled for safety

  • ‘All our families, were just running away from the Kolovai area, because the Kolovai is right beside the seashore,’ a resident said, explaining Saturday’s chaotic scenes
  • Meanwhile, a New Zealand flight carrying relief supplies arrived in Tonga days after the island was hit by a volcanic eruption and tsunami
When Tonga’s Hunga Tonga-Hunga Ha’apai volcano violently erupted, sending shock waves and tsunami across the Pacific, the blast in the small island nation was so deafening that fleeing families could only wave at their loved ones to run.

“The first explosion … our ears were ringing and we couldn’t even hear each other, so all we do is pointing to our families to get up, get ready to run,” local journalist Marian Kupu said in one of the first eyewitness accounts to emerge from the South Pacific nation.

“We evacuated and then we, all our families, were just running away from the Kolovai area, because the Kolovai is right beside the seashore,” said Kupu, explaining the chaotic scenes just outside the capital Nuku’alofa on Saturday evening.

The explosion, which has killed at least three people, sent tsunami waves some 15m high crashing ashore on one small island and badly damaged villages, resorts and many buildings on others. It also cut domestic and overseas communications, severing an undersea internet cable.

Diplomat says entire Tonga village destroyed after volcanic eruption

Nasa’s Goddard Space Flight Centre has said the force of the eruption was estimated to be the equivalent of five to 10 megatons of TNT, or more than 500 times that of the nuclear bomb the US dropped on the Japanese city of Hiroshima at the end of second world war.

Five days later communications have only been partially restored and reinstating full internet services was likely to take a month or more, according to the owner of the archipelago’s sole subsea communications cable.

Standing on the side of the road in the capital, Kupu is wearing a mask and white scarf to protect herself from the volcanic dust that shrouds Tonga and has contaminated drinking water supplies.

“The dust is on rooftops, trees, everywhere,” she said.

02:43

New images reveal scale of damage after volcano eruption in the Pacific off Tonga

New images reveal scale of damage after volcano eruption in the Pacific off Tonga

“What we are concerned about now is clean drinking water. Most of our drinking water has been contaminated from the volcanic dust.”

When asked about food supplies for Tonga’s estimated 105,000 people, Kupu said: “Maybe we can survive for the next few weeks but I’m not sure about water”.

Power to the capital and elsewhere was still fragile.

“Electricity is back, but it’s on and off. This is due to a lot of ash on transformers and street lights have been damaged. Some outages last for hours, some lasts for days,” said Kupu.

A Royal New Zealand Air Force C-130 Hercules is loaded before it flew to Tonga with aid. Photo: New Zealand Defence Force via Reuters

Around the capital and on the outer islands people on Thursday sifted through rubble and dust as they began the long task of rebuilding and an aid flight from New Zealand carrying humanitarian supplies arrived in Tonga.

A Royal New Zealand Air Force C-130 Hercules landed in Fua’amotu International Airport, a defence spokesperson said, after a blanket of volcanic ash was finally cleared off the runway.

An Australian Globemaster military transport aircraft also landed, the ABC TV reported.

“The aircraft is carrying humanitarian aid and disaster relief supplies, including water containers, kits for temporary shelters, generators, hygiene and family kits, and communications equipment,” New Zealand’s foreign minister, Nanaia Mahuta, said in a statement, referring to her country’s plane.

People clear ash off a damaged area in Nuku’alofa, Tonga. Photo: Broadcom Broadcasting via AP

The delivery of the supplies is expected to be contactless to ensure Tonga remains free of the coronavirus.

Kupu said a few villages on the western side of Tonga were very badly hit.

“I won’t say we are expecting more deaths but as we are speaking the government is trying to fly to the other islands to check over them,” she said.

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