Jakarta, Indonesia (CNN) -- The Mount Merapi volcano in Indonesia erupted at least three times Tuesday, forcing thousands of nearby residents to flee.
Indonesian  media reported that 15 people were killed, including some journalists  who were staying in a guesthouse to get close to the volcano. CNN could  not independently verify those reports. 
Mount Merapi, which  looms on the horizon north of the major city of Yogyakarta, is one of  Indonesia's most active volcanoes and lies in one of the world's most  densely populated areas. The volcano has a summit elevation of nearly  10,000 feet (3,000 meters).
Christian Awui, a rescuer at the  scene, told CNN that the first thing that residents heard were sirens  from an early warning system announcing the coming eruptions. 
Video: Volcano erupts in Indonesia
                           
"There was panic," he said. "You could hear the rumbles of the volcano."
People ran to a refugee camp about 4 kilometers (2.5 miles) away.  
Because it was still dark, it was hard to tell how the eruptions compared with previous ones, Awui said. 
Some  nongovernmental relief agencies were poised to offer immediate help.  One of them was World Vision Indonesia, a Christian relief and  development agency.
"Right now, our biggest concern is the  children," said Fadli Usman, World Vision Indonesia's rapid assessment  team leader. "Children are always forgotten in the early moments of a  disaster like this. My first task will be to assess the needs of the  children and their families in the evacuation centers so our team can  begin to help them."
Usman said about 1,500 people -- mostly  women and children -- had found refuge at a four-building shelter about 7  miles (12 kilometers) from the volcano. The evacuees, he said, are  worried about the men who stayed behind to guard their homes and fields  on the mountain.
A dusting of ash covered motorbikes and cars at  the shelter parking lot, the relief worker said. The heavy ash fallout  also obscured any view of the mountain from his location, he said.
Usman  had reported earlier that traffic was heavy as people left the region  near the mountain. The traffic was not chaotic, he said, and the road  was open and under control.
(www.cnn.com) 
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