MAUMERE, Indonesia — Rescue workers sifted through smoldering debris and thick mud Tuesday in search of survivors, a day after a volcano on Indonesia's island of Flores erupted and killed at least nine people with its searing lava and ash.
Mount Lewotobi Laki Laki spewed thick brownish ash as high as 2,000 meters (6,500 feet) into the air and threw lava, gravel and ash up to seven kilometers (4.3 miles) from its crater, blanketing nearby communities with tons of volcanic debris and forcing residents to flee.
''The tremendous roar of the volcano suddenly woke us up that night, followed by flashes of lightning,'' said Adelina Nuri, a mother of three who fled along with her relatives from the village of Hokeng. She said they ran through a rain of glowing rocks as they fled.
''I saw a dazzling light like a glowing giant lamp out from the mountain when volcanic materials began to hit our zinc roof, created noise in my house. We were scared and panicked,'' she said.
The National Disaster Management Agency on Tuesday lowered the death toll from an earlier report of 10, saying a victim trapped under tons of debris in a collapsed house who was feared dead was rescued in critical condition. The agency said 63 other people were hospitalized, 31 of them with serious injuries.
More than 2,400 villagers streamed into makeshift emergency shelters after Monday's eruption that burned down seven schools, nearly two dozen houses and a convent on the majority-Catholic island, agency spokesperson Abdul Muhari said.
Smoldering debris, thick mud and a power blackout hampered the evacuation and search efforts, said Kensius Didimus, a local disaster agency official.
''We'll do everything we can to evacuate villagers by preparing trucks and motorbikes for them to flee at any time,'' he said, adding that the debris and lava mixed with rainfall formed thick mud that destroyed the main roads on the island.