WHAKATANE (New Zealand), Dec 13 (NNN-AGENCIES) — A team of elite New Zealand soldiers airlifted six bodies from the volatile White Island volcano on Friday, police said, in a mission carried out under the ever-present threat of another eruption.
Two military helicopters set off from Whakatane airport at first light for the offshore volcano, where an eruption last Monday is believed to have killed at least 16 people and severely injured dozens more.
The eight-strong military team was dispatched to recover eight bodies that remained on New Zealand’s most active volcano, which sits semi-submerged 50km out to sea.
After a tense wait of more than five hours, word came through from police that the majority of the bodies had been recovered and sent to a naval frigate anchored off the coast.
“Six bodies have been successfully recovered from Whakaari-White Island and are now on board HMNZS Wellington,” deputy commissioner John Tims said.
It was unclear whether the team would return to try to recover the two sets of remains still believed to be there.
Drone flights had helped locate six of the bodies before the operation began and they were the team’s priority as they laboured on the island in heavy protective gear that slowed them down and restricted movement.
Police said on the eve of the operation that they would search for the remains of the other two missing people but had limited time in such a dangerous environment.
As the military began their grim task, police took grieving families out near the volcano on a boat to perform a Maori blessing and locals chanted karakia, or prayers, on the shore as the island smouldered in the distance.
As the mission was under way, deputy police commissioner Mike Clement warned “there are many things that could go wrong” but added it was so far “playing out as we hoped”.
Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern also provided an update, saying the mission was being carried out to bring home grieving families’ loved ones.
“It has been an incredibly difficult operation but it’s been such a priority. We just want to bring everybody home,” she told Australia’s ABC Radio.
“It’s not over yet,” New Zealand Police Commissioner Mike Bush told reporters in Whakatane, the mainland coastal town where about 100 family and local community members prayed and sang together as they watched helicopters fly to and from the island.
Vulcanologists monitored live feeds from the mountain, ready to abort the operation if signs pointed to another eruption.
On White Island, poisonous gases are still billowing from the volcanic vent and the island is blanketed in a thick layer of acidic ash.
While troops were recovering the bodies, another 28 people – mostly tourists who had been on a day trip to see the natural wonder – were still being treated in hospitals across New Zealand and Australia, many in a critical condition suffering severe burns.
A total of 47 day-trippers and guides were on the island during the eruption, with police saying they were in two groups, one of which was closer to the volcanic vent and worst hit.
Those caught by the eruption hailed from Australia, the United States, Britain, China, Germany, Malaysia and New Zealand.
A coronial process has begun to identify those confirmed dead but police have said it could “take some time”. — NNN-AGENCIES