Thais rejoice at success of dramatic cave rescue

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CHIANG RAI, Thailand, July 11, 2018 (BSS/AFP) – Thailand celebrated the
successful mission to free 12 boys and their football coach from a cave
Wednesday, with the nation heaping praise on the rescue team as the
triumphant tagline “Hooyah” pinballed across social media.

The nerve-shredding three-day mission ended on Tuesday with the final
group of four boys and the coach emerging from the cave which had held them
captive for 18 days.

The rescue received blanket coverage in Thai media with newspapers The
Nation running the headline “Hooyah! Mission accomplished” and the Bangkok
Post emblazoned with “All Wild Boars saved”.

Despite spending days in the dark, dank cave health officials said the
boys — who are aged 11 to 16 — are in good physical and mental health and
eating normal food.

“It might be because they were all together as a team, helping each other
out,” public health ministry inspector general Thongchai Lertwilairatanapong
told reporters, singling out their 25-year-old coach for keeping their
spirits high.

The group remain in quarantine in Chiang Rai hospital where one of the
last batch of people to leave the cave has “minor pneumonia”, he said.

Some of the first boys to be freed have been able to see their parents, he
added.

The saga of the “Wild Boars” gripped the world, with the lives of the
group hanging in the balance as the threat of heavy rain injected urgency to
an already perilous extraction bid.

On Wednesday a few hundred Thai school children gathered opposite the
hospital, chanting thanks to those who helped and looking up at the building
that will be home to the rescued football team for the coming days.

Elsewhere Duangduen Sittiwongsa, a classmate of 16-year-old Pheeraphat
“Night” Sompiengjai, whose birthday fell on the same day the team entered the
cave, said they would give him cake and gifts when he came back to school.

“We will sing a song for him,” she said.

– Risky rescue – Rescuers had weighed up several options to save the boys,
including keeping them in the cave through the months-long monsoon season.

But they were prodded into the dangerous task of “diving out” the team
through submerged chambers and claustrophobic passages as oxygen levels in
the cave plummeted and rains menaced.

The group were led out in three batches by a team of 13 international
divers flanked by the Thai Navy SEALs, who greeted each successful rescue
with a “Hooyah” on their Facebook page.

That sign off quickly turned into a hashtag shared across social media,
where luminaries of business, politics and sport extended their best wishes
to the team and the rescuers.

Authorities have shrouded the details of the rescue bid in secrecy, with
fragments of information emerging about the heroic efforts of the dive team.

The dangers of the rescue were brought into sharp relief last Friday by
the death of a retired Thai Navy SEAL as he ran out off air in the flooded
cave complex as the extraction plans were being laid.

“I’m very happy and relieved. I haven’t been able to sleep for days. I’m
happy that the boys are out too,” said Khamluh Guntawong, the grandfather of
team coach Ekkapol Chantawong.

“He really cares for the boys,” he added, of a figure who is emerging as
something of a hero for shepherding the children through their ordeal.

The group became trapped in rising floodwaters and were found nine days
later emaciated and dishevelled on a muddy ledge, with water lapping
ominously below.

The saga captivated a global audience for over two weeks, rewarding them
with a remarkable happy ending.

French football star Paul Pogba dedicated his country’s World Cup semi-
final victory over Belgium to “the heroes of the day, well done boys, you are
so strong”.