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- Mount Ontake started erupting at lunchtime on Friday spewing out small rock and ash over a two-mile wide area
- Police confirm at least 36 hikers have been located in a state of 'cardiac arrest' and are feared dead
- They are Japan's first deaths from volcanic eruption since 1991, when 43 people died at Mount Unzen
- Rescue efforts with army helicopters were used to airlift survivors from the mountain side
- The volcano is 230km west of Tokyo but has not yet caused any disruption to flights in and out of the city
- Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe has instructed the military to rescue the hikers from the area
- Rescue efforts have now been called off due to rising levels of toxic gas near summit and approaching nightfall
Rescue
 teams searching Japan's Mount Ontake for missing climbers suspended 
operations as the volcano continued to shoot gas, rocks and ash into the
 air.
At least 36 people are believed to have died when Mt Ontake erupted unexpectedly on Saturday.
Many
 of those still stranded have been taking refuge in mountain lodges - 
some are injured and unable to descend on their own, while others are 
unwilling to take the risk.
However,
 a group of hikers first reported missing near the summit are now 
presumed dead. The group were located by police in a state of 'cardiac 
arrest' - but police declined to confirm their deaths pending a formal 
examination, as per Japanese custom.
Only
 four people have so far been confirmed dead in Japan's first fatal 
volcanic eruption since 1991, and at least 60 have been injured, some 
with broken bones. 
 
Soldiers, firefighters and police pictured conducting rescue operations on the slopes of the ash-covered volcano 
 
Desperate rescue: Mount Ontake erupted
 shortly before noon on Saturday, spewing large white plumes of gas and 
ash into the sky and blanketing the surroundings
 
Rescue efforts are now focusing on 
finding and evacuating survivors from the area. Today seven people were 
airlifted out by helicopter
A survivor is 
carried off the volcano by a group of soldiers. Some survivors are 
unable to descend on their own while others are not willing to take the 
risk
 
Rescue workers search for missing climbers and hikers on the volcano after the eruption left dozens injured, missing or stranded
 
Firefighters
 and members of Japan's Ground Self Defence Forces conduct rescue 
operations on Mount Ontake. A blanket of ash covered nearby buildings 
and land
 
Two tanks from the Ground Self Defence Force enter Otaki village in a bid to help support the rescue operations

Hundreds of soldiers, police officers 
and firefighters have moved into the area to help rescue those still 
stranded on the volcano
 
News crews and a tank parked side-by-side in the area near Mount Ontake a day after the volcano erupted without warning
 
Smoke continues 
to emanate from Mount Ontake a day after the eruption which stranded 
more than about 40 hikers and injured another 42
Military
 helicopters today plucked seven people off the mountainside and workers
 were helping others make their way down the slopes. One woman was being
 carried on a stretcher, and a man with a broken arm was walking down. 
All were conscious and most could walk, though details of their 
conditions were unclear.
Japanese
 television footage also showed a soldier descending from a helicopter 
to an ash-covered slope, helping latch on a man and then the two of them
 being pulled up. 
The
 Self-Defense Force, as Japan's military is called, has deployed seven 
helicopters and 250 troops. Police and fire departments are also taking 
part in the rescue effort. 
An
 official in the area said rescue efforts for had now been called off 
due to rising levels of toxic gas near the peak, as well as approaching 
nightfall. 
Most
 of those caught in the eruption made their way down at the time, but 
about 40 spent the first night near the peak. Some wrapped themselves in
 blankets and huddled in the basement of buildings.
'The
 roof on the mountain lodge was destroyed by falling rock, so we had to 
take refuge below the building,' one told NHK national television. 
'That's how bad it was.'
More 
than 60 people were injured, several with broken bones. Earlier, the 
Fire and Disaster Management Agency had said authorities were trying to 
confirm the whereabouts of 45 people but it was not clear whether that 
figure included the 36 hikers presumed dead.
The
 volcano was still erupting today, pouring smoke and ash hundreds of 
metres into the sky. Ash was found on cars as far as 80km away.
Volcanoes
 erupt periodically in Japan, one of the world's most seismically active
 nations, but there have been no fatalities since 1991, when 43 people 
died in a pyroclastic flow, a superheated current of gas and rock, at 
Mount Unzen in southwestern Japan.
Rescuers had planned to bring four of them down the mountain by later tonight, Jiji Press said citing police sources.
 
Although a handful of people were 
rescued today, operations have been put on hold after a rise in levels 
of toxic gases on the volcano
 
The eruption covered a vast area in 
volcanic ash. Pictured are rescue workers trekking up the volcano in an 
attempt to locate trapped hikers
 
The rescue teams pictured descending 
an area not hit by ash, after they called off the search operation due 
to a rise in toxic fumes
 
Smoke emanating from the volcano - as seen at dusk from the nearby Otaki Village, in Nagano, Japan
 
Pictured 
left, a plume of smoke billows into the sky above a set of cabins built 
on the volcano, while right, a group of rescuers traverse the slope
Some
 550 soldiers, police officers and firefighters were involved in a 
large-scale search-and-rescue operation in a bid to save dozens of 
hikers who were thought to have been stranded on the volcano since it 
erupted without warning spewing ash, rocks and steam into a sunny autumn
 weekend busy with tourists and hikers.
A
 suffocating blanket of ash up to 20 centimetres deep covered a large 
area of the volcano, had forced up to 150 to seek refuge in mountaintop 
shelters at one point.
The mountain is popular among hikers particularly in late September as leaves turn their colours.
Walkers
 at the top of the Japanese volcano were forced to run for their lives 
after it started to erupt without warning, sending a cloud of ash and 
rock streaming down the mountainside.
Within
 seconds, the cloud covered an area more than two miles wide from the 
summit of Mount Ontake with witnesses claiming that visibility was 
reduced to zero.
 
A survivor of the disaster is lifted 
from the ash by a helicopter. The rescue efforts have now been called 
off due to a high level of toxic gas emanating from the volcano
 
An injured hiker is carried into an ambulance in Kiso, Nagana after being airlifted out from the eruption zone
 
Pictured are mountain cottages and a shinto shrine on the volcano - all of which is covered in a deep layer of volcanic ash
 
 
Pictured left, rescuer workers carry an injured hiker off the slopes, while right, another is airlifted into a helicopter
 
Police confirmed the missing hikers 
have been found near the summit of the volcano in a state of cardiac 
arrest and are feared dead
 
Some 250 hikers 
were forced to run for their lives after Mount Ontake erupted yesterday 
lunchtime without any prior warning, covering the area in rock and ash
 
 
Seconds 
after the image left, visibility was reduced to almost zero as the 
walkers were engulfed in a cloud of volcanic dust and rock, right 
 
The ash cloud spread out immediately 
in every direction shooting thousands of feet into the sky before 
covering a two square mile area in dense, choking dust 
Emergency
 services were initially unable to use helicopters in their rescue 
operations due to fears the helicopters would suffer catastrophic engine
 damage if they ingested the highly abrasive volcanic dust.
The 3,067 metre mountain is 230km west of Tokyo and has already forced airlines to divert aircraft from the area. Although the injured and trapped were being airlifted off the volcano today after flying conditions improved. 
One
 of the hikers was filming the mountain at the time of the eruption and 
captured some of the terrified walkers as they fled for their lives. 
Only
 a matter of seconds after hearing the noise, the cloud of abrasive dust
 closes in on them, blocking out the day light. As the cloud struck, the
 person holding the camera is forced to turn away from the onrushing 
dust and dive to the ground in order to breathe.
Ontake, Japan's second-highest volcano, last erupted seven years ago. Its last major eruption was in 1979.
Satoshi
 Saito, a 52-year-old hiker who climbed Ontake on Saturday and descended
 less than an hour before the eruption, said the weather was good and 
the mountain, known for its fall foliage, was crowded with people 
carrying cameras.
'There
 were no earthquakes or strange smells on the mountain when I was 
there,' Saito, who usually climbs Ontake several times a year, said. He 
also said there were no warnings of possible eruptions posted on the 
trail.
'But
 a man who runs a hotel near the mountain told me that the number of 
small earthquakes had risen these past two months, and everyone thought 
it was weird.'
 
A local fire brigade blocked roads towards Mount Ontake (pictured in the background), which is located 230km west of Tokyo
 
More than 250 
people were on the mountain when the volcano started to erupt yesterday 
lunchtime forcing walkers to improvise protective masks 
 
Those near the bottom of the mountain 
were able to continue downwards, but an estimated 40 of those near the 
summit were stranded with seven reported missing 
The
 hiker's camera footage shows that instantly every exposed area in the 
mountain top is soon covered in the dust and people can be heard 
coughing and spluttering. 
Mikio
 Oguro, an NHK journalist who was on the slope on an unrelated 
assignment, told the station that he saw massive smoke coming out of the
 crater, blocking sunlight and reducing visibility to zero.
He
 said: 'Massive ash suddenly fell and the entire area was totally 
covered with ash,' he said by phone. He and his crew had to use 
headlights to find a lodge to take refuge.
'My colleagues later told me that they thought they might die.' 
Japan's
 meteorological agency raised the alert level for Mount Ontake to three 
on a scale of one to five. It warned people to stay away from the 
mountain, saying ash and other debris could fall up to 2.5 miles away.
One eyewitness told Japanese TV channel NHK: 'It was like thunder. I heard boom, boom, then everything went dark.' 
So
 far there has been no sign of any lava in the volcano, which last 
erupted in 2007, but scientists are monitoring the situation closely. 
Japanese prime minister Shinzo Abe returned earlier today from a visit 
to the US. He instructed the military to rescue the stranded hikers and 
remove them from the area in case the situation deteriorates further.
Mr
 Abe said: 'Nearly 200 people are in the process of descending the 
mountain, but we are still trying to figure out details. I instructed to
 do all we can to rescue the people affected and secure the safety of 
the trekkers.
Nagano
 police sent a team of 80 to the mountain to assist the climbers who 
were making their way down, while Kiso Prefectural Hospital, near the 
mountain, said it had dispatched a medical emergency team.
 
Volcanic ash has blanketed huge areas 
surrounding the summit of the volcano. Pictured, a helicopter and rescue
 workers work near the buildings
 
Rescuers said 
that 42 people were seriously injured while seven of those were rendered
 unconscious with a further seven reported missing since yesterday 
 
Japanese prime 
minister Shinzo Abe instructed the military to launch a rescue operation
 to escort the stranded walkers in case the situation deteriorates
 
Mount Ontake, pictured, began erupting
 round noon on Friday spewing rocks and ash over a two-mile radius of 
the mountain's summit
 
The 3,067 metre Mount Ontake is about 
120 miles west of Tokyo and is popular with hikers and adventurous 
tourists looking for a walking holiday 
 
Walkers in the area were forced to 
improvise to protect themselves from the volcanic ash which was falling 
from the sky following yesterday's eruption 
 
A TV crew working in the area at the 
time of an unrelated story thought they were going to be killed when the
 ash and rocks began falling from the sky
A hospital official said: 'We expect a lot of injured people so we are now getting ready for their arrival.'
Mari
 Tezuka, who works at a mountain rescue hut on the mountain said: It's 
all white outside, looks like it has snowed. There is very bad 
visibility and we can't see the top of the mountain,
'All
 we can do now is shut up the hut and then we are planning on coming 
down... This is a busy season because of the changing autumn leaves. 
It's one of our busiest seasons.'
 
Scientists said there has not been any
 lava seen yet during this most recent event although Mount Ontake last 
erupted back in 2007 
 
Flights in and out of Tokyo have so far not been affected by the eruption, although local flight restrictions are in place
 
Poisonous gases and ash are being 
pumped thousands of feet into the sky as the volcano threatens to 
explode for the first time in almost a decade


 
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