<p>At least 25 people were killed when Guatemala's Fuego volcano erupted Sunday, belching ash and rock and forcing the airport to close, the country's disaster agency said.</p>.<p>"The toll was 25 dead as of 9:00 pm (0300 GMT Monday)," the spokesman for the National Coordinator for Disaster Reduction (Conred) said in a WhatsApp group.</p>.<p>Search and rescue operations for the missing and dead have been suspended due to low light and dangerous conditions, and will resume this morning, the spokesman said.</p>.<p>The eruption sent ash billowing over the surrounding area, turning plants and trees gray and blanketing streets, cars and people.</p>.<p>Farmers covered in ash fled for their lives as civil defense staffers tried to relocate them to shelters during the event.</p>.<p>Earlier, Conred chief Sergio Cabanas and President Jimmy Morales held a news conference, saying that the eruption left seven dead, 20 injured and affected more than 1.7 million people.</p>.<p>Morales announced a red alert for Escuintla, Chimaltenango and Sacatepequez, the areas most affected by the eruption, and an orange alert throughout the country.</p>.<p>The president said he and his government would determine whether to ask Congress to declare a state of emergency in the areas, while at the same time appealing to the population for calm.</p>.<p>Hundreds of personnel from the police, Red Cross and military have been dispatched to support emergency operations, Morales said.</p>.<p>Cabanas said that the dead included a civil protection official and others trapped by muddy material that descended from the 3,763-meter (12,346-foot) volcano.</p>.<p>Twenty people suffered burn injuries, and more than 3,000 were evacuated due to the eruption, which affected rural communities around the volcano as well as Antigua Guatemala, a colonial-era town very popular with tourists in the Central American country, he said.</p>.<p>There are also "missing persons, but we do not know how many," Cabanas said, adding that lava had blocked entry to several communities.</p>.<p>Dense ash blasted out by the volcano shut down Guatemala City's international airport, civil aviation said.</p>.<p>People were working to clean ash off the runways to get the airport operating again.</p>.<p>It is the second major eruption this year from the peak, following another that subsided at the beginning of February after sending ash towering 1.7 kilometers into the sky.</p>.<p>Guatemala has two other active volcanoes, Santiaguito in the west and Pacaya just south of the capital.</p>
<p>At least 25 people were killed when Guatemala's Fuego volcano erupted Sunday, belching ash and rock and forcing the airport to close, the country's disaster agency said.</p>.<p>"The toll was 25 dead as of 9:00 pm (0300 GMT Monday)," the spokesman for the National Coordinator for Disaster Reduction (Conred) said in a WhatsApp group.</p>.<p>Search and rescue operations for the missing and dead have been suspended due to low light and dangerous conditions, and will resume this morning, the spokesman said.</p>.<p>The eruption sent ash billowing over the surrounding area, turning plants and trees gray and blanketing streets, cars and people.</p>.<p>Farmers covered in ash fled for their lives as civil defense staffers tried to relocate them to shelters during the event.</p>.<p>Earlier, Conred chief Sergio Cabanas and President Jimmy Morales held a news conference, saying that the eruption left seven dead, 20 injured and affected more than 1.7 million people.</p>.<p>Morales announced a red alert for Escuintla, Chimaltenango and Sacatepequez, the areas most affected by the eruption, and an orange alert throughout the country.</p>.<p>The president said he and his government would determine whether to ask Congress to declare a state of emergency in the areas, while at the same time appealing to the population for calm.</p>.<p>Hundreds of personnel from the police, Red Cross and military have been dispatched to support emergency operations, Morales said.</p>.<p>Cabanas said that the dead included a civil protection official and others trapped by muddy material that descended from the 3,763-meter (12,346-foot) volcano.</p>.<p>Twenty people suffered burn injuries, and more than 3,000 were evacuated due to the eruption, which affected rural communities around the volcano as well as Antigua Guatemala, a colonial-era town very popular with tourists in the Central American country, he said.</p>.<p>There are also "missing persons, but we do not know how many," Cabanas said, adding that lava had blocked entry to several communities.</p>.<p>Dense ash blasted out by the volcano shut down Guatemala City's international airport, civil aviation said.</p>.<p>People were working to clean ash off the runways to get the airport operating again.</p>.<p>It is the second major eruption this year from the peak, following another that subsided at the beginning of February after sending ash towering 1.7 kilometers into the sky.</p>.<p>Guatemala has two other active volcanoes, Santiaguito in the west and Pacaya just south of the capital.</p>