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<\/div>But while locals have fled, a team of volunteers have been travelling to Ruang by boat on daring rescue missions to save abandoned pets from the foot of the volcano, which remains at its highest alert level.\n\u201cWe know that they (the animals) are still there. How can we let them die while we know they are still alive?\u201d 31-year-old volunteer Laurent Tan told AFP on Saturday.\nLaurent, the owner of two animal shelters in the North Sulawesi provincial capital of Manado, is one of eight volunteers who has made the six-hour ferry journey to Ruang\u2019s neighbouring Tagulandang island several times following the eruptions.\nOn one of their missions to the island\u2019s ash-covered homes, they retrieved an unnamed pup, a white cat, and a bright turquoise-and-white tropical bird.\n
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<\/p>The dog, a female with burns on her face and body, was brought to a makeshift shelter on Tagulandang, where a veterinarian treated her on a wooden desk while a volunteer held up a mobile phone flashlight.\nShe appeared to have survived the eruptions by taking shelter in a large gutter. The surrounding village above ground was destroyed, Laurent said.\n
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<\/p>The group, made up of volunteers from animal welfare organisations, deployed for a second time on Friday after some pet owners made desperate social media appeals for them to evacuate their pets. The group has since rescued \u201ca lot\u201d of animals, she added.\nAn AFP journalist at the scene said more than a dozen animals had been rescued since Friday.\nSome owners learnt their pets were still alive after seeing them in pictures of Ruang island in the media.\n\u2018Their lives matter\u2019<\/strong>\nAuthorities told locals to evacuate outside a seven-kilometre exclusion zone around the crater, which was lowered to 5km today, with around 11,000 people earmarked for evacuation.\nAs of yesterday, more than 5,000 people from Tagulandang have been evacuated, the national disaster mitigation agency said, while all of Ruang\u2019s residents \u2014 more than 800 \u2014 have been taken for permanent relocation.\nAuthorities warned of the potential of flying rocks, lava flows and tsunamis due to debris sliding into the sea.\nBut despite the risks, the volunteers got to work.\nOne climbed over the fence of an abandoned house to rescue several dogs left behind by their owner, before handing them over to vet Hendrikus Hermawan.\nHendrikus said the owner had asked the volunteers to help rescue the dogs, which included a five-month-old puppy.\nMany of the rescued animals appeared hungry and stressed after their owners left them, he told AFP.\n\u201cThe first treatment we do here is to give food and additional vitamins to relieve their stress,\u201d he said, adding that the animals could survive as long as they were nourished.\nThe volunteers aim to rescue all the dogs, cats and birds threatened by the volcano, bring them to Manado and reunite them with their owners, said Laurent.\nWhile the initial focus of the eruptions is on their impact on humans, the volunteer said animals should not be forgotten.\n\u201cOur main focus is the animals. Many people have already received help, but these animals had no help,\u201d she said.\n\u201cFor me, their lives matter. We consider them part of our family.\u201d\nStay up-to-date by following Daily Express\u2019s Telegram channel.
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