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Mount Etna, Europe’s most active volcano, lights up the night sky with eruptions as seen from Rocca Della Valle, Italy on Monday. Photo: Etna Walk / Marco Restivo / Handout via Reuters

Mount Etna volcano erupts, closing Sicily’s troubled Catania airport

  • The volcano burst into action overnight, firing lava and ash high over the Mediterranean island
  • The latest cancellations at Catania airport came a month after a fire at a terminal building led to weeks of disruptions for passengers.
Italy

Flights serving the eastern Sicilian city of Catania were halted on Monday after an eruption from nearby Mount Etna, local authorities said, bringing fresh travel woe to the crisis-plagued Italian airport.

The 3,330 metre (10,925 ft) high volcano burst into action overnight, firing lava and ash high over the Mediterranean island. The lava flow subsided before dawn, but ash was still coming from one of the craters.

Flights to and from Catania, a popular tourist destination, will remain suspended until Tuesday morning, the airport operator said in a statement, dashing hopes they could resume on Monday night.

Travellers grounded after the closure of Catania airport in Sicily, Italy on Monday following the eruption of the Mount Etna volcano. Photo: EPA-EFE

Passengers were advised to check with airlines before heading to the airport on Tuesday.

Incoming flights were diverted to other airports on Sicily on Monday. It is the peak of the summer holiday season in Italy where Tuesday is a public holiday.

Catania Mayor Enrico Trantino banned the use of motorcycles and bicycles in the city for the next 48 hours, because many streets were covered in ash, and ordered cars to drive no faster than 30 kph (19 mph) due to the skiddy conditions.

The latest cancellations at Catania airport, which attracts more arrivals than the island’s capital, Palermo, came a month after a fire at a terminal building led to weeks of disruptions for passengers.

The last major eruption of Etna was in 1992.

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