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Clouds block clear view of solar eclipse in Indonesia
Thousands of people streamed out of homes to catch a view of the solar eclipse on Wednesday. Clouds spoilt any chance of a clear view for many skywatchers
Jakarta
However, the total solar eclipse enthralled many Indonesians on Wednesday in the east of the archipelago, the only part of the country that had the opportunity to see it in totality. In Palembang city on the western island of Sumatra where the total eclipse should have been visible, cloudy skies and smog obscured the view for many of the thousands of people who gathered outside shortly after daybreak.
“It was very annoying that we couldn’t see the sun properly,” said David Pratama, 18, as jeers of disappointment rose up in the crowd around him as the sun moved behind the moon. A partial eclipse of the sun was visible to millions in Australia, parts of Southeast Asia and the Pacific, but only people in a small band of Indonesia had the opportunity to see the moon perfectly silhouetted by the sun.
In the capital, Jakarta, hundreds of residents and school children flocked to city’s planetarium where special viewing glasses were handed out to see the partial eclipse. “We are very excited because it’s our first time seeing something like this,” said Santi who brought along her five-year old daughter to watch as the eclipse briefly dimmed the skies.
Indonesia last saw a total eclipse in 1983 and it will be 33 years until the next one, according to the meteorological agency. The world’s next total solar eclipse will occur in August 2017 and be visible in the United States, according to NASA. A solar eclipse happens when the moon casts a shadow on the earth as it passes between the earth and the sun.
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