Thousands of residents were briefly allowed to return to their homes in the Philippines to rescue their pets and recover their belongings.
Daniel Reyes, mayor of the Agoncillo town inside the danger zone of the Taal volcano, said they took advantage of the "waning activity" and let 3,000 residents back into their homes.
"If I would not let them rescue their animals, their animals would die and together with them their sources of livelihood," Reyes told Reuters.
People were seen driving through thick layers of volcanic ash to take their dogs, TV sets, gas stoves and electric fans.
More than 40,000 residents of Agoncillo have been displaced since Taal began spewing massive clouds of ash, steam and gas on Sunday.
On Friday, the Philippine Institute of Volcanology and Seismology (Phivolcs) observed that the danger level posed by the volcano remained at 4 out of a possible 5, with "hazardous eruption" possible "within hours to days".
US Secretary of State Marco Rubio hosted a rare meeting between Israeli and Lebanese envoys in Washington on Tuesday, saying he hoped the two countries would agree to a framework for a peace process, even as Israel pressed its war on Hezbollah.
Negotiating teams from the US and Iran could return to Islamabad this week to resume talks to end the war, sources told Reuters on Tuesday, after the collapse of weekend negotiations prompted Washington to impose a blockade on Iranian ports.
Around 250 people were missing after a boat carrying Rohingya refugees and Bangladeshi nationals capsized in the Andaman Sea, the United Nations' refugee and migration agencies said in a joint statement on Tuesday.
Canada, the UK, Australia, Japan and six other countries condemned the killings of UN peacekeepers in Lebanon on Tuesday while calling "for an urgent end to hostilities" in the country where Israeli attacks have killed over 2,000 people since March.