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A sense of trepidation builds on the coach as we are waved through the roadblock that has held back people from returning to the Icelandic town of Grindavik amid an “imminent” volcanic eruption warning.
But the volunteer rescue forces posted on guard duty in battering 32mph winds have to follow the strict instructions of Iceland’s tourist minister. There is a lot of high-speed arguing in Icelandic, and eventually we pass through.
The coach is carrying the world’s media for the first time since the initial 5.2-magnitude earthquake gripped the globe’s attention. But after days of stalemate, fears of Iceland’s economy tanking, and rumours spreading of the entire country disappearing beneath the Atlantic, the government has reluctantly allowed the press to visit the site.
The drive takes in the vast expanse of Iceland’s volcanic beauty, complete with ethereal elves' houses built into the rocks, which have in the past forced state planners to reroute roads.
First foreign journalists pass closed roads towards Iceland volcano close to erupting
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One local tells me the first person who tried to move an elves’ dwelling had their own house catch fire. The second time their wife died.
“But what happened the third time?” I ask... to no answer. Maybe the earthquake of Grindavik is punishment enough in this magic-fearing country.
“Mind your step,” I am warned in the understatement of the century, as a brick that used to form part of the junction of the Austurvegur and Ranargata roads gives away under my foot and tumbles into a vast black chasm.
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The crack begins on grass, just a sliver, where it is easy to skip over from one tectonic plate to the other.
It just misses the Lutheran church and then begins to open up with steam still billowing out of it from the bubbling magma chamber causing the chaos from a kilometre below.
You can follow the chasm along to where it has ripped up a children’s playground before it stops by a pagan temple complete with Stonehenge-like sculptures. Maybe Viking blessings do work.
Smoke is seen rising from holes, in which residents say cats are hiding because it's warm'
(Reuters)
The once bustling harbour town has been left empty since 10 November – the day the ground opened up and caused all the children and the elderly to flee, not knowing what was around the corner or if they would even see home again.
Early Christmas decorations are left still switched on and children’s bikes have been left to rust in the front yard of a home with an enormous crack down the side – simply because it stood in the way of the shuddering faultline stretching from the mountains through the little town and into the Atlantic.
The faultline stretches from the mountains, through the quiet little town and into the Atlantic
(Barney Davis)
One street has its houses now kneeling forwards and a huge fissure splits Grindavik’s only old people’s home.
The town’s fish and chip shop still has its garish advertising hoarding switched on offering an eerie respite from the horrific hailstorms that descend every three minutes upon this desperate Englishman.
Evacuating 3,700 residents was no mean feat. They were told to turn off the electricity in their homes and close all windows.
Houses keel drunkenly over, fissures running through their gardens
(Barney Davis)
You can see the signs flapping in the high winds, declaring the home was successfully emptied.
Rescue workers, still hesitant to return on the trip, recall the moment they told people to get out of their homes, some of which they were born in, and leave everything behind.
Hjordis Gudmundsdottir, from Iceland’s civil protection department, told The Independent: “We had to quickly explain to them what was happening then we had to tell them to move, where to go. We just wanted to help them.
“It is still dangerous here. This is why we don’t let normal people or the media in until now. I have never seen anything like it before. Usually we will have a few minutes warning to get out but with the weather like it is today we have even less.
“It was such a difficult day, especially for the people who live here. We always think of them and hope they can come home soon. But we don’t know when.”
On the way out we see the valiant non-stop efforts of diggers carving out lava trenches to protect the Svartrsengi geothermal power plant.
If there is a volcanic eruption, which is thankfully seeming less likely by the day, I doubt anyone will return to Grindavik. But what is without question is that the quaint, family-friendly harbour town will never be the same again.
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1/ 4Inside Iceland’s ghost town of Grindavik
Inside Iceland’s ghost town of Grindavik
Smoke is seen rising from holes, in which residents say cats are hiding because it's warm'
REUTERS
Inside Iceland’s ghost town of Grindavik
The faultline stretches from the mountains, through the quiet little town and into the Atlantic
Barney Davis
Inside Iceland’s ghost town of Grindavik
Houses keel drunkenly over, fissures running through their gardens
Barney Davis
Inside Iceland’s ghost town of Grindavik
The town is carved in two, and steam rises from the cracks in the roads
Barney Davis
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