BFF-65, 66 Desperate search for children in Thai cave presses into fourth night

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Desperate search for children in Thai cave presses into fourth night

MAE SAI, Thailand, June 26, 2018 (BSS/AFP) – The desperate search for 12
children and their football coach trapped in a flooded cave in northern
Thailand pressed into its fourth night Tuesday as distraught relatives prayed
and awaited news about the missing youngsters.

The dramatic rescue operation has captivated the country as scores of Navy
divers, soldiers and police descended on the cave where the young football
team and their coach have been stuck since Saturday.

The boys, aged between 11 and 16, went into the cave after football
practice and were trapped after heavy rains flooded the chambers and blocked
the main entrance.

The group is believed to have retreated to the back of the cave as heavy
rains continued to fall, slowly raising water levels inside the complex
network in northern Chiang Rai province that spans several kilometers
(miles).

After days of desperately searching, officials said Tuesday they found a
previously undiscovered opening in a section of the cave that they would
attempt to helicopter rescuers and food into.

“If we find them, the first thing is to provide first aid and food before
thinking of how to bring them back up,” Interior Minister General Anupong
Paochinda told reporters. “We will not stop, we will work 24 hours. We’re
racing against time, and we want them to be safe,” he said, adding that the
boys had some food with them when they went into the cave.

– ‘They will survive’ –

Helicopters hovered overhead as large crowds amassed around the cave’s
muddy entrance, including wailing parents in plastic raincoats who prayed for
the team’s safe return.

“I asked for all God’s wishes, but I’m certain in my heart that they will
survive. They have been inside the cave before,” the father of one of the
young footballers said.

One relative fainted while others waited under a makeshift tent near a
shrine with dolls, spiritual offerings and messages for the young boys.

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“Please return to your family, please let no harm be done to you,” one
mother said in prayer.

The Tham Luang cave near the Laos and Myanmar border is popular among
locals who visit in the dry season to worship the small Buddha statues
inside.

A sign outside the remote site warns visitors not to enter during the rainy
season from July to November when flood risk runs high.

Bicycles, backpacks and football boots were found near the entrance of the
cave and divers said Monday they spotted footprints and handprints in one of
the chambers that are believed to belong to the boys.

Continued rainfall has hampered rescue efforts but a new dam eight
kilometers (five miles) long was being built Tuesday to try and prevent more
water from flooding the site.

Electric cables were also laid to provide lighting inside some parts of the
blacked out tunnels and an underwater robot was dispatched to survey the
area.

The football team, dubbed the “Boars”, are familiar to the area and have
previously visited the cave, officials said.

The rescue operation echoed a grim accident in 2007 when eight people were
killed as flash floods swept through a cave in Thailand’s southern Khao Sok
national park.

Six foreign tourists and two local guides died, while the fiance of one of
the victims survived by clinging onto a ledge for 21 hours.

Thailand Prime Minister Prayut Chan-O-Cha said Tuesday additional security
forces were deployed to the scene and he called for national prayers.

“I want the media and everyone to support the children and coach and wish
for their safety,” he said.

BSS/AFP/SSS/1911 hrs