BFF-49 Four boys rescued from flooded Thai cave

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THAILAND-CAVE-ACCIDENT-UPDATE

Four boys rescued from flooded Thai cave

MAE SAI, Thailand, July 8, 2018 (BSS/AFP) – Four boys among a group of 13
trapped in a flooded Thai cave for more than a fortnight were rescued on
Sunday, authorities said, as elite divers raced to save the others.

The first two emerged from the Tham Luang cave complex after navigating a
treacherous escape route of more than four kilometres (2.5 miles) through
twisting, narrow and jagged passageways.

“Two are out of the cave. Two more are likely to follow shortly,”
Lieutenant-General Kongcheep Tantrawanit told AFP.

Kongcheep said that the other two boys had also reached a base camp inside
the complex from where they could walk the rest of the way.

Foreign elite divers and Thai Navy SEALS on Sunday morning began the
extremely dangerous operation to extract the 12 boys and their football coach
as they raced against time, with imminent monsoon rains threatening more
flooding that would doom the rescue operation.

“Today is the D-day. The boys are ready to face any challenges,” rescue
chief Narongsak Osottanakorn told reporters near the cave site on Sunday
morning.

The group became trapped in a cramped chamber deep inside Tham Luang in a
mountainous area of northern Thailand on June 23, when they went in after
football practice and got caught behind rising waters.

Their plight transfixed Thailand and the rest of the world, as authorities
struggled to devise a plan to get the boys — aged between 11 and 16 — and
their 25-year-old coach out.

– ‘Mission Impossible’ –

The rescue of the first four was a stunning victory in an operation
Narongsak had earlier dubbed “Mission Impossible”, but there were no
guarantees the others would emerge safely. Another operation commander said
on Sunday the rescue efforts could take several days to complete, with the
boys and their coach being brought out one-by-one.

The group was found dishevelled and hungry by British cave diving
specialists nine days after they ventured in.

Initial euphoria over finding the boys alive quickly turned into deep
anxiety as rescuers struggled to find a way to get them out.

The death of a former Thai Navy SEAL diver who ran out of oxygen in the
cave on Friday underscored the danger of the journey even for professionals.

After a short deluge of rain on Saturday night and with more bad weather
forecast, Narongsak on Sunday said authorities had to act immediately.

“There is no other day that we are more ready than today,” he said.
“Otherwise we will lose the opportunity.” Between the base camp inside the
cave and the trapped boys are twisting, turning cave passageways with
torrents of water gushing through.

The water in the cave is muddy and unclear, with one diver comparing it to
a cafe latte. Ropes were installed to help guide the boys through the
darkness.

Narongsak said Sunday morning two divers would escort each of the boys out
of the cave.

– Rescue efforts –

Officials had looked at many different ways to save the boys and their
coach.

One early potential plan was to leave them there for months until the
monsoon season ended and the floods subsided completely, but that idea was
scrapped over concerns about falling oxygen levels and waters rising too
high.

More than 100 exploratory holes were also bored — some shallow, but the
longest 400 metres deep — into the mountainside in an attempt to open a
second evacuation route and avoid forcing the boys into the dangerous dive.

American technology entrepreneur Elon Musk even deployed engineers from
his private space exploration firm SpaceX and Boring Co. to help.

Meanwhile rescuers fed a kilometres-long air pipe into the cave to restore
oxygen levels in the chamber where the team was sheltering with medics and
divers.

– Emotional notes – On Saturday, Thai Navy SEALs published touching notes
scrawled by the trapped footballers to their families, who had been waiting
for them agonisingly close by outside the cave entrance.

The boys urged relatives “not to worry” and asked for their favourite food
once they were safely evacuated, in notes handed to divers.

In one, Pheerapat, nicknamed “Night”, whose 16th birthday the group were
celebrating in the cave when they became stuck on June 23, said: “I love you,
Dad, Mum and my sister. You don’t need to be worried about me.”

BSS/AFP/ARS/1915 hrs