Flooding rain and mudslides from Tropical Storm Agatha and possibleadditional eruptions from Pacaya Volcano are threatening Guatemala thisweekend.A volcano, named Pacaya, located about 15 miles south of Guatemala City,erupted Thursday, showering the capital city with up to 3 inches of ash.
The ash covered the landscape in Guatemala City and nearby areas, includingrunways and aircraft at La Aurora airport, which remained closed into theweekend.
The volcano has been spewing ash and lava flows on occasion since themid-1960s.
While activity of Pacaya was diminishing into Saturday, seismologists wereconcerned for another major eruption soon.
The grounds surrounding a church in Calderas, Guatemala were covered withash Friday, May 28, 2010, following the eruption of Pacaya Volcano. AP Photo /Moises Castillo.According to the Associated Press, officials have asked the nearly threemillion residents of Guatemala City to "not" leave their homes. However, atleast 1,600 people in villages nearest the plume of ash and stones wereevacuated. Close to 1,000 homes had been damaged or destroyedAccording to CNN, a TV reporter and two villagers were killed by a rain ofstones hurled by the eruption.
The fate of three children said to be missing was not known.
Meanwhile, offshore in the nearby Eastern Pacific Ocean, an area of showers andthunderstorms became better organized Friday night and strengthened into theAmericas first tropical depression of the season early Saturday morning.
The system strengthened at midday and is now Tropical Storm Agatha in theEastern Pacific Basin.