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EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

Residents visit evacuated Icelandic town for first time

Members of Search and Rescue team stand on a site close to where lava is spewing from the site of the volcanic eruption north of Grindavik, Iceland. - Reuters
Members of Search and Rescue team stand on a site close to where lava is spewing from the site of the volcanic eruption north of Grindavik, Iceland. - Reuters
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GRINDAVIK, Iceland: Residents returned briefly to an evacuated fishing town in Iceland on Thursday for the first time since a volcanic eruption to check on their homes and collect some belongings.


Scientists who flew over the area on Thursday said lava flows had continued to diminish and no volcanic activity was visible, three days after the volcano spewed lava and smoke high into the air on the Reykjanes peninsula in southwest Iceland.


The 4,000 residents of Grindavik were evacuated in early November from the town about 40 km southwest of the capital Reykjavik because of intense seismic activity. They had been allowed back intermittently on brief visits since then, but not since Monday's eruption.


Returning residents, accompanied on Thursday by media, found a big crack in the ground had been secured by fences. Cars occasionally drove through the largely empty streets, and a few Christmas decorations hung from lampposts.


The intensity of lava flows has steadily decreased since Monday, easing worries of a repeat of the international travel chaos caused by ash from another volcanic eruption on the island in 2010.


The Icelandic Metrological Office said in a statement on Thursday that the lava flows seemed to have diminished further overnight, but that it was too early to declare the eruption over.


"Scientists flying over the volcanic areas confirm that no volcanic activity is visible, and it appears to have extinguished in the craters, but glow is still visible in the lava field," it said.


"The eruption is reduced compared to the beginning, and it's just slowly dying down," Armann Hoskuldsson, Research professor at the Institute of Earth Sciences at the University of Iceland told Reuters. "It will last for a few days more and then it's finished." - Reuters


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