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Thousands evacuated, flights disrupted as Indonesian volcano erupts again
Thousands of people have been evacuated and flights disrupted after Indonesia’s Mount Ruang erupted again, sending thick clouds of ash more than 5km (3 miles) into the sky.
Officials said the volcano in the archipelago’s North Sulawesi province erupted at least three times on Tuesday, prompting fears debris might fall into the sea and cause a tsunami.
Footage shared by Indonesia’s disaster mitigation agency (BNPB) showed strikes of lightning flashing above Ruang’s crater as fiery red clouds of lava and rocks were thrown into the air.
The agency said that all 843 residents living on Ruang Island, where the volcano is located, had been moved to Manado, the provincial capital about 100km (62 miles) away. Some 12,000 people from the neighbouring Tagulandang Island are being evacuated to Siau Island further north with two ships deployed to help with the process.
Rosalin Salindeho, a 95-year-old Tagulandang resident, spoke of her fears when Ruang erupted after arriving in Siau. “The mountain exploded. Wow, it was horrible. There were rains of rocks. Twice. The second one was really heavy, even the houses far away were also hit,” she said.
Indonesia’s meteorological agency (BMKG) shared a map on Wednesday morning that showed volcanic ash had reached as far as Borneo, the island Indonesia shares with Brunei and Malaysia.
Indonesian air traffic control agency AirNav Indonesia said seven airports had been forced to close including in Manado and the city of Gorontalo.
Malaysia Airlines said the ash led to the cancellation of some flights to and from airports in the Borneo states of Sabah and Sarawak, with travel dependent on the weather conditions. North Sulawesi is in the central part of the Indonesian archipelago.
Julius Ramopolii, the head of the Mount Ruang monitoring post, said the volcano was still billowing ash and smoke above the crater on Wednesday morning. “The volcano is visibly seen, the plume of smoke is visible, grey and thick, and reached 500-700 metres (2,300 feet) above the crater,” he said in a statement. He said the alert level remained at its highest of a four-tiered system and called on residents to remain outside a seven-kilometre exclusion zone declared by the authorities.
Indonesia sees regular earthquakes and volcanic eruptions as a result of its position on the Pacific “Ring of Fire” where multiple tectonic plates meet.
Mount Ruang recorded a series of eruptions earlier in April that also led to evacuations and disruption to aviation amid fears of a tsunami.
In 2018, the crater of Mount Anak Krakatoa, between Java and Sumatra islands, partly collapsed during a major eruption that sent huge chunks of the volcano sliding into the ocean, leading to a tsunami that killed more than 400 people and injured thousands more.
(Aljazeera)
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Rutherford, spinners lead West Indies to second straight win
Given all the pre match hype about their 2016 encounter, this contest could well have been set up for a fall. Instead, all the chat about their T20 glory days inspired West Indies with bat and ball, as they landed a brilliant 30-run victory under the floodlights at the Wankhede Stadium, thanks to a calculated but powerful half-century from Sherfane Rutherford, and a stunning spin strangle in dewy conditions, led by Gudakesh Motie’s three wickets.
England looked to have the match in their grasp on numerous occasions: when West Indies slumped to 8 for 2 after losing what seemed a vital toss; when Adil Rashid bounced back from a rough day against Nepal with a stunning boundary-less spell of 2 for 16; when Phil Salt came clattering out of the starting gates to power England along to 67 for 1 in the powerplay.
But the walls closed in on them as soon as West Indies turned to spin. Motie and Roston Chase dovetailed magnificently through the middle overs for combined figures of 5 for 62 in eight, which became 6 for 94 in 12 when Akeal Hosein ended what he had begun by picking off England’s seventh wicket – Jamie Overton – in the covers.
Jofra Archer’s dawdling run-out by a Jason Holder direct hit epitomised an England performance that had run out of road, long before Sam Curran was left high and dry on 43 not out, with Chase’s tumbling catch at deep square leg off Rashid being a fitting way to cap a fine personal display. Having edged over the line against Nepal in their previous game, England’s impressive run of 11 wins in 12 T20Is came to a shuddering halt, and against a familiar World Cup nemesis.
With the 7pm start and heavy prospect of dew, England seemed to have stolen a march by getting the chance to bowl first. Archer, pumped up but erratic, touched 148kph in an opening over that included seven runs in wides, but a wicket as well, as Shai Hope rocked back to slam a cut to deep cover. Curran then made it 8 for 2 after seven legal deliveries, as Brandon King picked out deep point with a similar launch for the stands.
But, almost before they could cement their early advantage, England had it ripped clean from them. In his second over, Curran beat Shimron Hetmyer with a slower ball, then attempted a repeat dose and got smoked through midwicket for six. And Will Jacks, such a threat on Sri Lanka’s spinning decks last week, proved meat and drink with the field up for the powerplay. His loose first over was picked off for 19, including Hetmyer’s second six, high over backward square.
It takes more than one bad day for England to lose faith in their one-day trump card. Rashid’s habitual entry at the end of the powerplay came with the baggage of his brutal treatment against Nepal. But in his three-run opening over, he showcased a ripping legbreak to Chase and a skidding googly past Rutherford’s edge, and from that moment on, West Indies had no option but to treat him with utter deference, seeing him off in a boundary-less four-over spell.
Brook stretched his impact as far as he could dare, first through a change of ends while Overton’s heavy lengths – deemed surplus against Nepal – helped to keep a lid on West Indies’ progress. Rashid’s initial return, for the tenth over, delivered the wicket of Chase for 33 from 29, nailed on the back leg by a wonderful ripping googly, while his two overs were held way back, until the 16th and 18th overs, with Rovman Powell’s miscued slog to long-off capping fabulous final figures of 2 for 16.
As Rashid inadvertently showed in his final over, when dropping Rutherford’s steepling slog across the line on 56, his personal match-up against West Indies’ key man was extremely favourable – and ten balls for ten runs continued that trend.
The trouble was coming at the other end, with England unable to contain a typical West Indies pain-train acceleration, particularly when Rutherford found – in Holder – the ideal long-levered sidekick to clear the Wankhede’s tight boundaries. Jacks returned for a second over but was monstered over the leg-side for back-to-back sixes; Archer’s third was dispatched for 17, including another six for Rutherford that Rashid at deep third parried onto the rope.
Holder got in on the act with four sixes as their stand gathered momentum into the back of a toiling innings, and though he holed out to Overton for 33 from 17 in the final over, Rutherford nailed his seventh six over long-on to close out the innings in style. Without Rashid, England might have been chasing 220. Even with him, West Indies’ outscored England by 13 sixes to six. It was a very throwback means to make the difference.
Salt’s ability to hit fifth gear from the get-go is a rare and enviable trait. He clubbed Hosein’s first ball of the reply through long-off for four, but it was his second-over assault on Holder that ignited England’s powerplay. A match-up that has long been in his favour delivered a 24-run pummeling, as Salt sat deep to the length balls for two sixes over midwicket and carved with impunity through the width for three further fours.
Had he carried on as he’d begun, it might have been a different tale. But he couldn’t, as Romario Shepherd’s harder length cramped his advances for a 14-ball 30. Even so, Jacob Bethell’s left-handedness unlocked the angles against Hosein’s cramping spin, and when Jos Buttler capped a 67-run powerplay with a square-driven four off Shamar Joseph, England seemed very much in control.
Buttler’s first six, from his 13th ball, looked like being the moment that his innings would go into overdrive. Instead, Chase challenged him to repeat his stroke with another determined offbreak on a good length, and long-on was waiting to spring the trap, with Buttler’s 21 leaving him just shy of his 4,000th T20I run.
Enter Motie, an unassuming nemesis maybe, but a player who has seen plenty of this England line-up over the past two years, and whose left-arm spin found just enough purchase amid the rising dew to scupper England’s bid to keep their tempo high.
His spell was not perfect: in particular, his change-up legbreak proved an erratic option, but two balls after Bethell had clubbed a full-toss over midwicket, Tom Banton was picked off at short covers as he failed to time his drive.
One over later, Bethell’s promising stay was done in by Motie’s skiddy line from over the wicket, as he was beaten for pace off the wicket to lose his off stump for 33, and as he bowled his four overs off the reel between overs eight and 14, Motie signed off with the biggest remaining fish. Harry Brook had played within himself for a 14-ball 17, biding his time for the big finish, but he fell within himself too; a tame prod looping back to the bowler to cap a killer spell of 3 for 33.
It wasn’t entirely clear who had been slip-streaming who. But by the end of his four overs, Chase’s figures were even more frugal, 2 for 29, with Jacks’ poor day ending with plumb lbw for 2. England’s lack of bowling partnerships was glaring in the final analysis. It makes their Kolkata Cup clash with Scotland on Saturday all the more compelling.
Brief scores:
West Indies 196 for 6 in 20 overs (Shimron Hetmyer 23, Sherfane Rutherford 76*, Roston Chase 34, Rovman Powell 14, Jason Holder 33; Jofra Archer 1-48, Sam Curran 1-36, Jamie Overton 2-33, Adil Rashid 2-16) beat England 166 in 19 overs (Phil Salt 30, Jos Buttler 21, Jacob Bethell 33, Harry Brook 17, Sam Curran 43*; Akeal Hosein 1-32, Romario Shepherd 1-07, Shamar Joseph 1-30, Gudakesh Motie 3-33, Roston Chase 2-29) by 30 runs
[Cricinfo]
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Ellis, Zampa lead Australia to big win against Ireland
Without their captain, and down to 12 available players, Australia overcame what could have been an awkward start to their T20 World Cup campaign with an impressive all-round display as they downed Ireland by 67 runs in Colombo in a performance that showed their batting is not all about blasting sixes.
It was a dramatic build-up to the game for Australia – the last team to start the tournament – when it was announced 15 minutes before the toss that captain Mitchell Marsh was unavailable due to a testicular injury caused when he was struck in the groin while batting earlier in the week.
Travis Head, therefore, captained Australia and because of the decision to give Tim David an extra couple of days in his recovery from a hamstring injury, and no replacement for Josh Hazlewood having yet been named, it did not leave much for the selectors to choose from.
When Head was run out in the second over there was a chance it could have become a very tricky outing, but a stand of 49 between Josh Inglis and Cameron Green settled things then Matt Renshaw, who was a late addition to the squad, and Marcus Stoinis played excellently in a partnership of 61 off 44 balls to build a total of 182 on a tough, slow, gripping surface.
It was well out of reach for Ireland, who had hoped some familiarity with conditions may help after facing Sri Lanka at the same ground, but they folded for 115. They suffered a huge blow when Pul Stirling retired hurt first ball after hobbling through for a single and the top order was picked apart by Nathan Ellis.
Head was given a life in the first over when he cut Matthew Humphreys to backward point where Ben Calitz put down a low chance. Ireland had dropped seven chances against Sri Lanka and it was an ominous start. However, this one did not cost them as a horrid mix-up led to Head being run out. It added to a sense of unease around Australia, but that didn’t last for long.
Inglis and Green took the attack during the fielding restrictions and Australia were quickly scoring above ten an over. The duo struck a six apiece in the fifth over against Mark Adair – although Inglis’ was nearly a parried boundary catch by Gareth Delany who had just touched the rope with his foot – before Green picked out midwicket.
Inglis followed the over after the powerplay, driving George Dockrell to cover, but the early flurry of boundaries had earnt Australia the ability not to have to force things too hard. Still, with Glenn Maxwell’s lean run continuing when as he edged Harry Tector behind – Lorcan Tucker taking a sharp catch – Australia were 88 for 4 in the tenth over and, with an out-of-form Cooper Connolly then the bowlers to come, a vital stand loomed.
Renshaw’s elevation to the squad in place of Matt Short had been with these exact conditions in mind. He and Stoinis, not a batter often associated with working the ball around, quickly assessed it was not a surface on which to blast the side out of a tricky situation. They tried to keep dot balls to a minimum and ran hard: Australia tallied 22 twos for the innings.
Renshaw waited 28 balls to find the boundary when he drove Dockrell through the covers. Stoinis had found the rope twice in three balls against Tector in the 12th over, but they were a rare breed. It wasn’t until the 18th over, when pace was back in the attack, that the ball cleared the rope again when Stoinis launched Adair over deep midwicket. Three balls earlier, Stoinis had been dropped by Delany in the covers. Adair did remove Stoinis with a low full toss, but Australia were able to cross 180
Ireland needed to replicate Australia’s powerplay burst but instead had to watch their captain limp back to the dugout after the first ball of the innings. He jabbed a full delivery from Xavier Bartlett to the on side and a couple of steps after setting off was in clear pain, barely able to make it to the other end. Ross Adair was dropped by Renshaw, a simple chance at point, in the second over, but Harry Tector lofted Matt Kuhnemann into the deep where the catch was safely held by Green.
Then Ellis, who is the senior member of Australia’s remaining pace attack, showed his bag of tricks. His first delivery was a back-of-the-hand slower ball which completely bamboozled Ross Adair who played all round it and lost middle stump. It was pace-bowling deception at its best.
Two balls later, Curtis Campher pulled to midwicket and the wheels were coming off. At the start of Ellis’ next over, Calitz dragged into leg stump and inside the powerplay his figures red 2-1-5-3. Adam Zampa then did his job, working through the middle and lower order with four wickets, but fittingly it was Ellis who ended the match to finish with a career-best haul.
Brief scores:
Australia 182 for 6 in 20 overs (Marcus Stoinis 45, Jos Inglis 37,Cameron Green 21, Matt Renshaw 37, Cooper Conolly 11*, Xavier Bartlett 11*; Mathew Humphreys 1-33, Mark Adair 2-44, George Dockrell 1-31, Harry Tector 1-24 ) beat Ireland 115 in 16.5 overs (Ross Adair 12, Lorcan Tucker 24, Gareth Delany 11, George Dockrell 41, Mark Adair 12; Maththew Khunemann 1-29, Nathan Ellis 4-12, Adam Zampa 4-23) by 67 runs
[Cricinfo]
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Heartbreak for Gurbaz and Afghanistan as South Africa win after double Super Over
South Africa survived the T20 World Cup’s group of death by outlasting Afghanistan in a match that went into two Super Overs.
They had it won when the last over of regulation time began with Afghanistan needing 13 with one wicket in hand. Kagiso Rabada, though, bowled two no-balls, but a running error allowed them to tie the match. South Africa were then done and dusted but Tristan Stubbs hit a last-ball six to force a second Super Over. This one left Afghanistan needing four sixes off four balls; Rahmanullah Gurbaz, who scored 84 off 42 in regulation time, hit three of them, needed just a four to take it to the third Super Over after Keshav Maharaj bowled a wide, but hit straight to point.
A couple of metres either side, and Afghanistan would have had another shot at beating South Africa in a T20I for the first time. Losing semi-finalists last edition, now they are left needing more than just wins against UAE and Canada to make it out of the first round.
Allowed no soft launch by the draw, having lost the first match against New Zealand, Afghanistan came into this must-win encounter spin-heavy on a pitch with some grip. Quinton de Kock and Ryan Rickelton, though, scored twin half-centuries to give their taller bowlers with canny changes of pace just enough – it seemed – to defend despite an outlier effort by Gurbaz. However, Rabada and Marco Jansen made closing errors against the No. 10 Noor Ahmad. With two needed off the last three balls – first of those a free hit – the last pair took an improbable second to give South Africa a lifeline and the T20 World Cup its first double Super Over.
The skilled left-arm quick Fazalhaq Farooqi who would later make the error to cause the tie, got off to a superb start, swinging the ball each way and taking out Aiden Markram with a slower ball to expose two left-hand batters to offspinners. The shapes Rickelton’s body makes when playing shots can often be similar to de Kock’s, and he has for long been the natural heir. At times, South Africa have found it difficult to accommodate both in the same XI. They will be thankful they had these two here.
It was de Kock – only 6.94 per over against spin so far in his T20 career – who broke the shackles after a start of 12 for 1 in four overs. Whatever de Kock did, though, Rickelton did with more brute force. Left-arm wristspinner Noor, brought in this match as the only change, bore the biggest brunt of it. De Kock welcomed him with a six over long-on first ball, and two balls later Rickelton hit an even bigger one.
The duo even got to their fifties in the same over: the 11th, bowled by Mujeeb Ur Rahman. Rickelton took only 23 balls, de Kock 34, but it was de Kock who had taken on spin early on.
Taken down for 21 runs in his first two overs, captain Rashid Khan started the comeback for Afghanistan with the wickets of Rickelton and de Kock in the same over to reach 699 T20 wickets. The duo added 114 in 10.1 overs to take South Africa to 126 in the 13th over, but now began a new game. Afghanistan offered batters little pace, and only a couple of big blows from Jansen in the end took them to 187. That was just 63 runs off the last 7.3 overs.
Brief scores:
South Africa 187 for 6 in 20 overs (Ryan Rickelton 61, Quinton de Kock 59, Dewald Brevis 23, David Miller 20*, Marco Jansen 16; Fazalhaq Farooki 1-32, Azmatullah Omarzai 3-41, Rashid Khan 2-28) beat Afghanistan 187 in 19.4 overs (Rahmanullah Gurbaz 84, Ibrahim Zadran 12, Daewish Rasooli 15, Azmatullah Omarzai 22, Rashid Khan 20, Noor Ahmed 15*; Lungi Ngidi 3-26. Marco Jansen 1-42, Kagiso Rabada 1-38, George Linde 1-39, Keshav Maharaj 1-27) in the Super Over
Afghanistan [Super Over 1] 17/0 [Azmatullah Omarzai 16*, Rahmanullah Gurbaz 01*]
South Africa [Super Over 1] 17/1 [David Miller 01*, Dewald Brewis 06, Tristan Stubbs 10*; Fazalhaq Farooqi 1-17]
South Africa [Super Over 2] 23/0, [Tristan Stubbs 07*, David Miller 16*]
Afghanistan [Super Over 2] 19/2 [Mohammed Nabi 00, Azmatullah Omarzai 00*, Rahmanullah Gurbaz 18; Keshav Maharaj 2-19]
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