SANTIAGO, Chile - Chile and Argentina are evacuating
nearly 3,000 people after officials issued a red alert for the
increasingly active Copahue volcano bordering the two countries.
Chilean officials began evacuating 2,240 people within a 25-kilometre (15.5-mile) radius of the volcano Tuesday morning. Argentine officials began evacuating about 600 people on their side of the border Monday night.
The nearly 10,000-foot (2,965-meter) Copahue sits in the Andes cordillera, between Chile's Bio Bio region and Argentina's Neuquen province.
Bio Bio Gov. Victor Lobos says the people living in the foothills of the volcano own about 21,000 head of cattle. He tells local Radio Cooperativa that some of them are refusing to leave the area because they don't want to leave their animals behind.Read here.
Chilean officials began evacuating 2,240 people within a 25-kilometre (15.5-mile) radius of the volcano Tuesday morning. Argentine officials began evacuating about 600 people on their side of the border Monday night.
The nearly 10,000-foot (2,965-meter) Copahue sits in the Andes cordillera, between Chile's Bio Bio region and Argentina's Neuquen province.
Bio Bio Gov. Victor Lobos says the people living in the foothills of the volcano own about 21,000 head of cattle. He tells local Radio Cooperativa that some of them are refusing to leave the area because they don't want to leave their animals behind.Read here.
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