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Thailand cave rescue: All 12 boys and coach successfully rescued

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MAE SAI, Thailand — The scrawny boys were huddled on the floor of the cave when the British divers emerged from the murky water.

As his light flickered from one boy to another, one diver called out, “How many of you?”

“Thirteen,” a boy answered.

“Brilliant,” the diver said.

After 10 days trapped in a flooded cave complex in northern Thailand, and after an enormous search effort that had transfixed Thailand, the missing 12 boys and their soccer coach had finally been found in Tham Luang Cave on Monday.

In a brief video filmed by another diver, which was posted on the Thai Navy SEAL Facebook page, the boys and their coach seemed in surprisingly good condition. Some boys sat and some stood as they spoke with the rescuers.

Food was foremost on their minds. “Eat, eat, eat,” one of the boys can be heard saying in English.

The group had been the focus of a search-and-rescue operation ever since the boys and their coach went into the cave complex after soccer practice on June 23 and were caught inside by rising floodwaters. While the cave is a popular spot to visit, a sign outside warns that in the rainy months starting in July, it is unsafe to go inside.

The two British divers who were the first to reach the boys were John Volanthen and Rick Stanton, both experts on cave rescues, according to Bill Whitehouse, the vice chairman of the British Cave Rescue Council.

The next challenge will be getting the soccer team out of the flooded cave in their weakened condition and without scuba training. The boys range in age from 11 to 16, and their coach is 25.

“I’d expect these children to be physically in fairly rough shape, and psychologically terrified,” said Dr. Eric Lavonas, an emergency physician and trained diving medicine specialist from Denver Health Medical Center and a spokesman for the American College of Emergency Physicians.

The governor of Chiang Rai Province, Narongsak Osottanakorn, who is overseeing the search-and-rescue operation, said a medical team would treat the team members and evaluate them to determine when they could be moved.

“I assure you we found them,” Mr. Narongsak told reporters. “After we have the doctor assess their condition, they are going to give them treatment for them to be able to move. Then we are going to decide next how to move them.”

Officials said that infection was a central worry, and that antibiotics and pain killers were included — along with food and electrolyte drinks — in the supplies being brought to the team.

Divers were finally able to reach the group after enlarging a narrow, submerged passageway that had been too small for them to get through while wearing air tanks.

Earlier, crews had used huge pumps to reduce the water level, and divers had placed guide ropes and air tanks along the route to reach the site of the trapped boys.

King Maha Vajiralongkorn Bodindradebayavarangkun had indicated he was following events closely, helping to focus the attention of government officials.

The boys’ first question when the divers arrived was whether they could leave right away. They also wanted to know how long they had been in the cave.

One of the divers explained that the cave was flooded and that it would take some time to get them out. But he assured them that other divers would soon be bringing food and supplies.

“Many people are coming,” the diver, believed to be Mr. Volanthen, said. “We are the first.”

Because the boys and their coach went to the cave after soccer practice, it is unlikely they would have had much, if any, food with them. But given how long they survived and the condition in which they were found, health experts say it is certain they had drinkable water, whether from within the cave or brought with them.

“Food is not the priority,” Dr. Lavonas said. “It’s getting them to a safe place. The human body is pretty good at dealing with short-term starvation.”

Kham Phromthep, whose 12-year-old son, Duangpetch Phromthep, was among the boys trapped in the cave, said he was ecstatic when he saw his son in the video.

“I am very happy to see his face among the other faces,” he said.

Like other relatives of the missing group, Mr. Kham has been going to the cave every day to follow the rescue operation.

He was at home Monday evening when he heard the news and hurried back to the cave on his bicycle.

“I’m very happy, very relieved,” he said. “He’s lost some weight. And he looks tired. But still, I am very happy to see him.”

Hundreds of officials from more than 20 government agencies, along with private companies, were involved in the search. Rescuers came from at least six countries, including members of the United States military.

“This is an absolute humongous success for Thailand,” said Capt. Jessica Tait, the spokeswoman for a United States Air Force team assisting in the operation.

Searchers had believed the boys and their coach would go to a large cavern known as Pattaya Beach, which they thought would be dry and have more air than other parts of the cave.

But Pattaya Beach was flooded, too, and the group went another quarter-mile inside the cave complex to another chamber, said Mr. Narongsak, the governor.

The group was found about three miles from the cave entrance.

Officials had been trying numerous approaches to reach the boys, including attempting to find other entry points into the seven-mile-long cave complex and possibly drilling through the mountaintop into the roof of the cavern where the group was believed to be.

But the most significant breakthrough came on Monday when the divers, coping with mudslides and limited visibility, painstakingly enlarged the small passageway that had blocked their underwater progress.

The divers came close to reaching the group last Tuesday when the water level was lower and they were able to get around the narrow opening. But they had to make a quick retreat when the water began rising and threatened to trap them in the cave, too.

Since then, heavy rains continued to flood the cave, hindering divers’ efforts to reach the group, despite the operation to pump out the water. For several days, the water in the cave system rose faster than it could be extracted.

Ben Reymenants, the Belgian owner of a diving school in Phuket, has been helping with the rescue and said he spent eight hours in the water Monday extending the guidelines.

“It’s fantastic. It’s amazing,” he said. “But now the real work starts, how to get them out. That’s the real challenge. Of course it is fantastic news, but they are very weak.”

Of the evacuation options, drilling to reach the boys is the least viable, as getting the necessary drilling equipment to the mountain atop the cave would be daunting and the process time-consuming. Despite more than a week of searching, no other entry to the cave has been found.

“My main priority is still pumping out the water,” said Mr. Narongsak, the governor, at a Tuesday morning news conference. But so far the water levels have proved hard to lower.

That leaves bringing the group out using scuba equipment, and even in the best circumstances, diving in caves is difficult and dangerous.

“You may have unusual current, you may have conditions which make it extremely difficult to navigate dangerous water with low visibility,” said Dean Wiseman, the spokesman for the National Speleological Society and a cave explorer for about 30 years.

For boys in a weakened state, who are unlikely to have dived before, the evacuation will pose significant risks.

“Trying to take nondivers through a cave is one of the most dangerous situations possible, even if the dives are relatively easy,” Anmar Mirza, a leading American cave rescue expert, told The Associated Press.

But the challenges can be surmounted.

“Even if they can’t swim, a rescue diver should be able to guide them along,” Dr. Lavonas said. “The diver will have lights. Obviously, these are young boys and they’re terrified. It’s not going to be an easy rescue, but it should be O.K.”

He said each rescue diver would take one child and would almost certainly use a harness to keep a grip on the child, whose regulator, a breathing device, would most likely be attached to the tank worn by the rescue diver

One serious concern is the possibility that the boys could be at risk for decompression sickness, or the bends, if the air they have been breathing in the cave has been under pressure from the rising water.

In that case, the best solution, Dr. Lavonas said, “would be to bring a portable hyperbaric chamber to the mountainside by helicopter, or to place the children on oxygen and move them quickly to a hyperbaric chamber.”

“We have to come up with a plan immediately,” the governor said Tuesday morning. “We are still racing against the water. If you look at the weather forecast, it is said that it will be raining the whole week.”

Over the past 10 days, the rescue operation has brought Thais together in this politically polarized country, in the hope that the boys and their coach would be found alive.

The king sent three kitchen trucks and staff members to help feed the search crews. He also donated 2,000 raincoats to help protect them from the heavy rains.

It was about 10:30 p.m. Monday when word reached the command center at Tham Luang-Khun Nam Nang Non Forest Park that the boys and their coach had been found, about 45 minutes earlier.

Some family members were waiting by themselves in a room at the park headquarters. When the news was announced, they jumped up, cheered and screamed with joy.

In the video of their discovery, the boys are alert as they talk to the divers.

“Tell him we are hungry,” one boy says in Thai. “I haven’t had anything to eat.”

They discuss what day it is, and the diver tells them that it is Monday.

“You have been here 10 days,” he says. “You are very strong.”

Later, one of the group says that he is very happy to see the divers arrive.

“We are happy, too,” the diver says.

“Thank you so much,” one boy says. “Thank you so much.”

https://www.nytimes.com/2018/07/02/world/asia/thailand-boys-rescued.html
 
They'll still be stuck there for months it seems

Just that we know where they are now
 
They'll still be stuck there for months it seems

Just that we know where they are now

And if I am correct, we can at least provide them supplies like food, water and medicine. And their course books...
 
And if I am correct, we can at least provide them supplies like food, water and medicine. And their course books...

In India their parents would have asked them to behave properly and make the most of the situation by studying for their upcoming board exams instead of sitting around idly or wandering in the dark.
Khali bethne se acha hai padhai kar lo. Sharma ji ki beti k last year 98 percent aaye the.
 
They'll still be stuck there for months it seems

Just that we know where they are now

The delay is due to lack of full face masks which fit the kids. Once they are sourced the kids can be evacuated quickly
 
Allah ka lakh lakh shukhr that they have been found.

But seems not that easy to get them out

Apparently they will need to learn to use scuba gear and also may be there for a month or so
 
The 12 boys and their football coach trapped in a flooded Thailand cave are set to be rescued in stages.

The group may be brought out at different times, depending on the health of each person, a Thai official said.

"All 13 may not come out at the same time. If the condition is right and if that person is ready 100%, he can come out," said Narongsak Osatanakorn, the Chiang Rai provincial governor.

Mr Osatanakorn said the group are still recuperating and a daily evaluation is being made of their fitness.

There will be no evacuation if there is any risk, he said.

Seal commander Rear Admiral Arpakorn Yookongkaew said there was no rush to bring the group out of the cave, since they are safe where they are.

However, some officials fear that forecasted heavy rains this weekend could force them to bring the boys out earlier.

The current water level in the cave means the boys, who cannot swim, will need to dive more than 1.2 miles to get out.

Rescue experts have said this would be extremely dangerous as the route is complicated even for experienced divers.

Mr Osatanakorn confirmed that the boys have been practising wearing diving masks and breathing, but he doesn't believe they have attempted any dives.

Meanwhile, authorities are still exploring other options, such as scouring the mountainside for other ways into the cave and finding faster ways to pump water from it.

Another option still being considered is to provide the group with four months of supplies to enable them to wait until the water subsides.

Offering a glimmer of hope for the families of the trapped boys, Mr Osatanakorn said that a new cave, suspected to be connected to the complex the group are situated in, has been discovered.

Additionally, two main routes of water flowing into the cave have been identified and blocked.

A spokesperson for the British Cave Rescue Council, which has members taking part in the operation, has advised that "although water levels have dropped, the diving conditions remain difficult and any attempt to dive the boys and their coach out will not be taken lightly because there are significant technical challenges and risks to consider."

The group are being looked after by seven members of the Thai navy Seals, including medics, who were staying with them inside the cave. Some of the boys have been treated for minor cuts on their feet and legs.

They were mostly in stable condition and have received high-protein drinks.

Read the full article at: https://news.sky.com/story/thailand...-in-stages-depending-on-their-health-11425753
 
Read an article, according to a retired Navy Seal, swimming out of this should be the very last option. Even if they consider this option, some kids will die.

Very tough situation now. Is drilling or bore not possible?
 
One of the thai navy seals died while getting out of the cave
 
One of the thai navy seals died while getting out of the cave

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-44734385

A former Thai navy diver has died while taking part in efforts to rescue 12 boys and their football coach trapped in a flooded cave in Thailand.

Petty Officer Saman Gunan lost consciousness on his way out of the Tham Luang cave complex, where he had been delivering air tanks.

"His job was to deliver oxygen. He did not have enough on his way back," the Chiang Rai deputy governor said.

PO Saman was brought out by his dive partner but could not be revived.

The oxygen level in the chamber where the boys have taken refuge has fallen to 15%, officials said at a news conference. The usual level is about 21%.

The boys and their coach ventured into the cave while it was dry, but were trapped by a sudden deluge of rainfall. Ten days later British rescue divers found them perched on a rock shelf about 4km (2.5 miles) from the cave mouth.

A death in the cave
PO Saman, who was reportedly 38, had left the navy but returned to aid in the rescue operation.

Said to be an avid runner and cyclist, he was part of the massive rescue operation launched after the group became stranded in the Tham Luang cave.

Even for experienced divers, the cave is dangerous
"Inside the cave is tough," said Thai Seal commander Rear Adm Arpakorn Yookongkaew.

"On the way back from setting up oxygen bottles, Petty Officer First Class Saman Gunan passed out. His buddy tried to give him first aid, but he did not respond. We brought him to chamber three and gave him another round of first aid, but he remained unconscious."

Officials said his funeral would be sponsored by the Thai king.

What are the rescue options?
PO Gunan's death underscored the danger involved in bringing the boys out of the cave. When asked how the group could make it out safely if an experienced diver could not, Rear Adm Arpakorn said they would take more precautions with the children, who are aged between 11 and 16, and their 25-year-old coach.

The search operation would go on, said Rear Adm Arpakorn. "I can guarantee that we will not panic, we will not stop our mission, we will not let the sacrifice of our friend go to waste," he said.

About 1,000 people are involved in the rescue operation, including navy divers, military personnel and civilian volunteers.

Do the boys have enough oxygen?
Authorities say there are concerns about falling oxygen levels in the chamber where the boys and their coach are trapped.

Oxygen levels were being depleted by the large number of people working inside the cave network, said Chiang Rai Governor Narongsak Osotthanakorn.

Authorities are now working to get a 5km (3 mile) cable into the cave to supply the group with air.

A blow to morale

Rescue operation leaders here say most of those involved have been trained to work in high risk environments, and to deal with eventualities like this.

They say the death of PO Saman won't impact on their mission. But there is a different atmosphere today in the makeshift village that's evolved at the cave's entrance, and the death of a former navy Seal highlights just how dangerous the route out of the cave remains.

It is unlikely the boys will be told about the death. One of the prime concerns here is to keep them not just physically but mentally strong.

Today, the priority is to connect a fibre optic cable that will allow the boys to speak to their families for the first time in nearly two weeks.

What are the rescue options?
The boys are being regularly supplied with food and medical care, but there are grave concerns over heavy rainfall forecast for Sunday.

Authorities are trying to work out how best to bring the group to safety, with officials stressing they do not intend to take any risks with the boys' safety.

The military has been pumping water out of the cave but if they cannot hold the water level down, they will be left with two stark options - teaching the boys to use diving equipment, or waiting months until the rainy season ends.

Leaving the boys to wait brings with it another danger: that the sinkholes and streams in the hills could flood the chamber completely.

"At first, we thought the children could stay for a long time... but now things have changed, we have a limited time," Rear Adm Arpakorn warned.
 
Football world urges boys in Thai cave to 'be strong' as they await rescue

(CNN)The video shows them wrapped in foil blankets. The footage is grainy but underneath the foil blankets two of the boys are clearly wearing replica football shirts -- one sports a Real Madrid top, another a red England national team jersey.

Aged between 11 and 16 years old, these are the boys of the Wild Boar football team, who are trapped in a cave in northern Thailand. And the eyes of the world are very much on them as officials try to coordinate their rescue.

When the 12 boys and their soccer coach entered the cave, only to become stranded in the dark tunnels by a sudden and continuous downpour, the World Cup in Russia had been going on for just over a week.

The globe's biggest football tournament has proved an event full of shocks and surprises, but the Wild Boar team is on the minds of its organizers and some of the sport's greatest stars.

"It is terrible news and the world of football hopes that someone can find a way to take these kids out of there," former Real Madrid and Brazilian star Ronaldo told reporters at a FIFA media event. Ronaldo won the World Cup with Brazil in 2002 and claimed the golden boot award after scoring eight goals in that tournament.


'Be strong'

Football's governing body FIFA told CNN Sport it was in close contact with the Football Association of Thailand about the boys' plight.

"It is with great joy that we have received the news that the 12 boys and their football coach have been found alive after nine days missing in a flooded cave in Thailand," said FIFA in a statement.

"We hope that with the help of the rescue team, the boys and their coach will be brought safely out of the cave so that they can be reunited with their families."

Leicester City's Christian Fuchs also urged the boys to "be strong." Thai billionaire Vichai Srivaddhanaprabha is the owner of the English Premier League club.

"We have very strong ties with the country of Thailand, I'm closely following the rescue efforts to secure the lives of the 12 players and their coach," Fuchs told CNN Sport.

"I wish everybody all the best with their rescue efforts and I'm sure everything will be turning out well."

Since Srivaddhanaprabha purchased Leicester for $57 million in 2010, the club has gone from strength to strength and against the odds won the Premier League in 2016.

Srivaddhanaprabha is the founder of Thailand's leading duty free store, King Power, and his net worth is $4.9 billion, according to Forbes.

Since being located, efforts continue to rescue the boys and bring them food, medicine and warm clothing.

Chiang Rai, govenor Narongsak Osottanakorn did not give an estimate on when they could be brought out and reunited with their families.

"All I can say is everyone is working very hard here. Everyone is working their hardest. They haven't rested since day one," he said in a media conference on Wednesday.

https://edition.cnn.com/2018/07/04/...-soccer-team-cave-message-spt-intl/index.html
 
Unrelated to this issue but another incident from Thailand. Wow a boat in Phuket capsized and many tourists on it died...

And I was supposed to be on that boat but overslept and missed it...

Pretty shaken
 
A proposed plan to rescue the boys soccer team trapped in a partly flooded cave in northern Thailand could launch as soon as this weekend, ABC News has learned.

According to an internal U.S. government report obtained by ABC News, the Royal Thai navy, supported by divers from the United Kingdom, the United States and other nations, has briefed Thai military leadership, interior ministry officials and the provincial governor on a proposed operation to evacuate the 12 boys and their coach from the miles-long cave in Chiang Rai province, alongside experienced divers in what is being called a “buddy dive.” Thailand’s prime minister will be briefed on the proposal Saturday morning local time.

Despite the risks, the accelerated timeline would take advantage of the children still having high oxygen levels within the cave complex, their relatively good health and also the fact that this would occur before the heavy rains are forecast to hit the region Sunday, which could raise water levels inside the cave and make a rescue mission even more precarious, according to the document.

Thai soldiers make their way near the Tham Luang cave as rescue operations continue for the 12 boys and their coach trapped in the cave at the Khun Nam Nang Non Forest Park in Chiang Rai, Thailand, July 6, 2018.
Officials said they would pull back some of the people in the cave in an effort to preserve oxygen levels.

"We want to keep the headcount minimal, but we'll always have four people with the kids and we'll work hard to bring as many oxygen tanks into that area as we can," Chiang Rai Gov. Narongsak Osatanakorn said in a press conference Saturday morning.

A decision timeline was unknown.

If approved, the first phase of the plan -- which involves the ongoing process of staging equipment and clearing obstacles in the cave -- could be completed by 6 p.m. local time Saturday. The second phase -- which calls for dangerous and risky “buddy diving” of the soccer team out of the cave network -- could start as early as Sunday morning local time.

U.S. dive and medical personnel will support the proposed operation by staging equipment and setting up triage stations, but will not go beyond the third chamber inside the cave, according to the document.

"We have experienced a lot of people fainting inside," Osatanakorn said Saturday.

Osatanakorn, the Thai official in immediate charge of the rescue operation, told reporters at a news conference late Friday that the plan was to bring the boys and their coach out of the cave the same way they initially entered two weeks ago. The group is currently learning how to breathe underwater using dive equipment, he said.

The recent death of a former member of the Royal Thai navy inside the cave who was working as a volunteer rescuer has hindered some progress that was already underway. Saman Gunan lost consciousness underwater during an overnight operation delivering extra air tanks inside the cave, along the treacherous route divers take to get to the trapped soccer team. He could not be revived and was confirmed dead early Friday morning.

Gunan, 38, formerly served in the Royal Thai navy’s Underwater Demolition Assault Unit, colloquially known as the Thai navy SEALs. His death marked the first fatality in the operation to rescue the group and underscored the dangers of navigating through the cave underwater, even for those who have experience.

"We will learn from our mistakes and try not to repeat them again," Osatanakorn said. "I will have to use the word 'try' here because I cannot make a commitment that something like this won't happen again. We can only use the words 'try' and 'do our best.'"

A planned operation to potentially “buddy dive” the group out of the cave, which the United States was going to support by pre-positioning air tanks in the seventh chamber, was cancelled due to the Gunan’s death and the associated risks, according to the internal U.S. government report.
.
A plan to install an oxygen cable in the chamber also had to be abandoned due to difficulties in routing the cable through the cave’s labyrinth of chambers and narrow passageways.

In the meantime, crews continued drilling into the south side of the cave complex on Friday to reduce the water level. It’s estimated to take an additional 12 to 18 hours to penetrate approximately 200 meters of rock. Drilling on the north side was suspended, as engineers and geologists work to find an alternate location closer to the stranded group.

According to the document, pumping operations have not been able to significantly lower the water level deep within the cave network. Rescue crews have assessed that the ongoing effort to pump water out from the main entrance of the cave has reached a point where it’s becoming less and less effective, and placing pumps further inside the cave -- beyond the 800 meter mark, where they currently are -- does not seem possible.

Medical assessments indicated the trapped children have good oxygen levels, with all of them having oxygen saturation levels of 95 percent and above. The oxygen level within the cave was most recently measured at 17.5 percent. Though higher than the previous reading, it is still significantly below the normal range of 20 to 21.5 percent.

Rescue crews have also determined that it’s impractical to bring into the cave the necessary amounts of food and supplies that are required to sustain the boys and their coach before the oxygen levels drop to fatal levels or the water level rises. Divers can only bring in small amounts of supplies at a time.

The U.S. Embassy and the Royal Thai Navy continue to receive offers from Xylem and Elon Musk to provide technical support in the operation. Both Xylem and Musk plan to send engineering experts to be integrated with the proposed operation Saturday.

The boys, ages 11 to 16, and their 25-year-old soccer coach have been trapped inside Tham Luang Nang Non, Thailand’s longest cave, since June 23. It’s believed the coach often took the Wild Boar teammates to the cave in Khun Nam Nang Non Forest Park for fun excursions after practice.

But as the group ventured deeper into the cave that Saturday afternoon, the sky opened up and it began to rain. The downpour sent floodwater rushing into the mouth of the cave and cut off their exit route. The group forged ahead until finding a dry, raised slope where they’ve remained stranded.

After they didn’t return from their hike, Thai officials launched a massive search and rescue operation involving more than 1,000 people, including specialists drafted from various nations such as Australia, China, Japan, the United Kingdom and the United States. On July 2, two British divers found all 13 alive in an area about three miles from the cave’s main entrance.

A team of Royal Thai Navy members, a doctor and a nurse have been staying with the group ever since, giving them high-powered protein drinks and medical assessments, while officials work on a plan to get them out as safely and quickly as possible.

During a press conference early Friday morning, Thai navy SEAL commander Rear Adm. Arpakorn Yookongkaew said there is “limited amount of time” to rescue the group.

"We can no longer wait for all conditions [to be ready] because circumstances are pressuring us," he told reporters. "We originally thought the boys can stay safe inside the cave for quite some time but circumstances have changed."

https://www.google.com.bh/amp/s/abc...an-rescue-boys-trapped-thai/story?id=56414323
 
The evacuation of a young soccer team and their coach trapped in a cave in northern Thailand for more than two weeks began on Sunday, officials said.

Thirteen foreign divers and five Thai Navy SEALs entered the cave at 10 a.m. local time for the mission, where they will attempt to extricate the boys one at a time by a dangerous dive through flooded tunnels, rescue mission chief Narongsak Osottanakorn told reporters at a press conference near the site on Sunday. It may take two to three days to free all 13 people.

“Today is D-Day. We are 100% ready.” Narongsak said. “There’s a storm coming and if we wait for the rains, conditions won’t be as perfect as they are now.” He added that the kids and their families are “fully aware” of the plan.

“We sent in a medic yesterday, they are mentally and physically ready. We’ll never be as ready as we are today.” he said. “We ask everyone to pray and cheer for our success.”

The lead rescue official, who served as governor of Chiang Rai province until a preplanned transfer last week, said the boys and their coach will be moved using a common cave exploration method called “buddy diving,” chaperoned by experts who will navigate them through the waters. Each boy will be accompanied by two “buddies.”

A heavy downpour stirred anxiety the night before. On Sunday, thick clouds hung overhead as light rain fell on the mountain and fields below.

On Friday morning, Thai authorities announced that a 38-year-old retired Navy SEAL, Petty Officer Samarn Kunan, died from lack of oxygen while delivering tanks along the flooded route. That the first fatality of the fraught mission was an experienced diver underscored the dangers of the plan to extract the group through the treacherous waterways.

Play Video

Heavy rains are expected to resume in the coming days, while breathable air inside the cave has dropped to concerning levels. Authorities said Saturday that oxygen had fallen to about 15% — normal safe levels are around 21%, while a drop to 12% could have an effect on brain function. Excess carbon dioxide is also a concern. As of Friday, a tube was being laced through the submerged passages to allow more oxygen in, as officials acknowledged for the first time that a back-up plan to keep the group inside for months if necessary may not be viable.

“Whatever we decide to do, we have discussed it with a lot of people, hundreds of experts,” Narongsak told reporters on Saturday. “We’re still at war with the water, and with time; when we found them we had won one battle, but we still have to rescue them to win the war.”

The 12 boys between the ages of 11 and 16, members of the Wild Boars soccer team, and their 25-year-old coach were trapped inside Tham Luang cave on June 23 when sudden rains flooded their exit. A monumental search effort involving more than 1,000 people and aided by at least seven foreign governments ended in a burst of jubilation late Monday when a pair of British divers found all 13 aliveand in stable health.

Read more: What It Was Like in Thailand When Rescuers Found the Soccer Team Trapped in a Cave

But the days since have been a rollercoaster of hope and anxiety as authorities weighed extraction plans, each uniquely perilous. Experts have said it may be too early to attempt a dive or properly train some of the team, who can’t even swim. The boys are weak after surviving on only a few snacks made to last the nine days it took rescuers to find them.

Video released Wednesday by the Royal Thai Navy showed them gaunt and wrapped in heat-retaining blankets. But Narongsak said Saturday that all of them were gaining strength after being fed on high-protein energy gels. In handwritten letters delivered by Thai Navy SEALs, each boy and the coach said they were in good health and high spirits, eager to go home.

Weather conditions were said to be the determining factor in which method of escape would be chosen — authorities were weighing three far-from-perfect options of either giving the boys a crash course in cave diving; widening existing holes in the cave’s ceiling and pulling them out from above; or resupplying them with food and other essentials for as long as it takes for waters to recede. Narongsak determined that the latter option was “impossible,” as the tunnels are unlikely to dry out before December.

Read more: Grandfather of Trapped Thai Boy Says He’ll ‘Never Let Them Near a Cave Again’

The saga of the trapped team has gripped the nation and captured sympathies across the globe. SpaceX founder Elon Musk entered the fray Saturday, sending a team of engineers to assess the situation and possibly design an “escape pod” or inflatable air-locked tube through which the team could exit. Musk acknowledged on Twitter that the latter idea was less likely to work given the cave’s topology, and it’s unclear how long either might take to design, test and implement.

Time is of the essence; even delivering provisions is difficult and could be further complicated by more rain. It takes expert divers roughly six hours to reach the trapped group from a Navy command center that has been set up about a mile deep inside the cave. They take another five hours to return in the fast-moving currents through pitch-black tunnels studded with stalactites and sharp turns. Divers have to remove equipment to squeeze through some narrow openings, while a few have already been widened to allow easier passage.

“Rescuing kids from inside a cave is not something that we normally do, it’s new to everybody,” Ivan Karadzic, a Danish diver volunteering on the mission, told TIME, “there’s no established method that’s the best.” Upon his last dive in the cave Thursday, he said visibility was still “very bad,” and the route is difficult to navigate even for expert cave divers with thousands of hours under their belt. “Teaching the kids to dive is simple,” he said, “but keeping them submerged for hours is going to be very complicated.”

http://time.com/5331817/thailand-cave-rescue-evacuation-begins/
 
Unrelated to this issue but another incident from Thailand. Wow a boat in Phuket capsized and many tourists on it died...

And I was supposed to be on that boat but overslept and missed it...

Pretty shaken

That was lucky dude. Take care
 
Two boys has been rescued now.

Allah pls save the rest and the divers too..:(
 
The operation to free 12 boys and their coach from a cave in northern Thailand is running "smoothly", the head of the operation says.

Four boys have been brought above ground, rescuers say.

The mission has now been paused for at least 10 hours as their oxygen tanks need to be replaced.

Rescuers decided to go ahead with the hazardous operation on Sunday because of fears of rising waters.

The next phase would begin on Monday morning, after relaying "all of the air tanks and all systems along the way", Chiang Rai Governor Narongsak Osottanakorn said.

Earlier reports said six boys had been freed, but this has not been confirmed.

Divers have been guiding the boys through darkness and submerged passageways towards the mouth of the Tham Luang cave system, where they have reportedly been able to walk the last part on foot.

Rescuers took advantage of a break in the rain to launch the mission much earlier than originally expected.

The first phase has also been conducted much faster than officials had predicted.

The group and their families had all given their agreement that they should be moved as soon as possible, said Mr Narongsak earlier.

What is happening at the cave?
A team of 90 expert divers - 40 from Thailand and 50 from overseas - has been working in the cave system.

The BBC's Dan Johnson, who is at the scene, said doctors went to assess the boys on Saturday and decided on a priority list, sending the weakest out first.

'I am dying to see him. I miss my son'
Getting to and from where the boys are has been an exhausting round trip even for the experienced divers.

The process includes a mixture of walking, wading, climbing and diving - all in complete darkness - along guide ropes already in place.

Wearing full-face masks, which are easier for novice divers than traditional respirators, each boy is being accompanied by two divers, who also carry their air supply.

The toughest section is about halfway out - at a section called "T-Junction", which is so tight the divers have to take off their air tanks to get through.

Beyond that a cavern - called Chamber 3 - has been turned into a forward base for the divers. There the boys can rest before making the last, easier walk out to the entrance. They are then taken to hospital in Chiang Rai town.

In an indication of how dangerous the journey can be, a former Thai navy diver died in the caves earlier this week. Saman Gunan was returning from a mission to provide the group with air tanks.

He lost consciousness and could not be revived. His colleagues said they would "not let the sacrifice of our friend go to waste".

How did they get there?
The boys were found inside the cave by British rescue divers on Monday, about 4km (2.5 miles) from the cave mouth.

Aged between 11 and 16, they belong to a football club called the Wild Boars, and became trapped during an excursion with their coach.

It took nine days to find them in the underground network's dark depths.

The race against the rain
Officials had originally thought the group might have to stay where they were until the rainy season ended - and that could have meant months underground.

They had also been exploring whether they could drill down into the cave, as well as scouring the mountainside for another way in.

But with the rainy season just beginning, it has become clear that the flooding which originally trapped the boys will only get worse in the coming days.

Rescuers have been desperately pumping water out of the cave, and Mr Narongsak said on Sunday that water levels inside were at their lowest levels so far.

"There is no other day that we are more ready than today," he said.

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-44757804
 
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Cave rescue: Divers ready to save remaining five Thais

Divers are preparing to resume a high-risk rescue operation to free the last five members of a group who became trapped in a vast cave system in northern Thailand last month.

The health of the four boys and their football coach is said to be good as they ready to be guided through the narrow flooded passages of the complex.

Eight boys have been brought out of the caves over the past two days.

The operation inside the Tham Luang caves has attracted global attention.

The group became trapped on 23 June after heavy rains caused flooding. They were found last week by divers.

How are the rescued boys?
The eight boys have not been seen in public, but have been pronounced to be in reasonable health.

The four who came out on Monday were stretchered from the caves and taken to a hospital in the nearby city of Chiang Rai.

The first group of four boys, who were rescued on Sunday, are being kept in quarantine in hospital and have yet to be reunited with their parents.

The Thai authorities say the rescued boys are able to eat rice porridge, although their request for a favourite pork dish has been turned down until their digestive systems recover from 10 days without food.

'Success against the odds'
By Dan Johnson, Tham Luang caves

It's going like clockwork. The ambulances driving slowly away from the cave entrance with their lights flashing show that another boy has been saved. There's a buzz around each one and the optimism grows. Word seems to spread from different sources but the Thai Navy Seals Facebook page gives the official updates.

This is a careful, delicate operation fraught with risk. But this rescue plan - daring, dangerous and complicated - is working. It's delivering success, against such difficult odds. Relief is starting to break the tension that's built over more than two weeks.

There's been another pause here overnight. Nobody wants to rush. There's admiration for the dive team's dedication, their skill and experience. They've risen to this challenge. But four of the boys, and their football coach, are underground for a 17th night. On Tuesday we'll all hold our breath once more, in the hope of seeing them emerge.

How are they being rescued?
A team of 90 expert divers - 40 from Thailand and 50 from overseas - has been working in the cave system.

They have been guiding the boys through darkness and submerged passageways towards the mouth of the Tham Luang cave system.

Getting to and from where the boys are has been an exhausting round trip, even for the experienced divers.

The process includes a mixture of walking, wading, climbing and diving along guide ropes already in place.

Wearing full-face masks, which are easier for novice divers than traditional respirators, each boy is being accompanied by two divers, who also carry his air supply.

The toughest part is about halfway out at a section named "T-Junction", which is so tight the divers have to take off their air tanks to get through.

Beyond that a cavern - called Chamber 3 - has been turned into a forward base for the divers.

There the boys can rest before making the last, easier walk out to the entrance. They are then taken to hospital in Chiang Rai.

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-44772783
 
This has been an amazing effort, these navy seals and divers are really well trained to be able accomplish such a life threatening mission.
 
Thai cave rescue: Reports eight boys have emerged from Tham Luang tunnels

CHEERS were heard outside the cave complex in Thailand with reports four more boys have successfully made the dangerous journey from inside the mountain to the surface, bringing the total rescued to eight.

The boys emerged from Tham Luang cave system over a period of just a few hours, with the final two making it to safety within minutes of one another at around 10pm Sydney time.

A team of 12 young footballers and their coach were trapped in a dark, flooded chamber on June 23 and have been imprisoned for more than two weeks in Chiang Rai province, in the country’s mountainous north.

Four boys were extracted on Sunday and four on Monday, and the eight were evacuated to hospital. That leaves just four boys and their 25-year-old coach deep within the tunnels.

With the rescues occurring four at a time, operations at the cave are winding down for the evening.

The fifth boy blinked into daylight at around 4.30pm (7.30pm AEST), with the sixth at around 6pm local time (9pm AEST) and the seventh and eighth in quick succession at 7pm (10pm AEST).

Authorities have yet to comment on the rescues on Monday and have not confirmed any of the freed children’s names.

Nonetheless, those leading the effort have become increasingly upbeat and said the remaining rescues could happen faster than expected. Media were told to expect “good news”.

On Monday evening, news service Reuters reported rescue workers had carried a person on a stretcher away from the cave complex and into a waiting ambulance, according to a witness.


He was the first boy to come out of the cave on the second day of the rescue mission to retrieve the group trapped in the flooded cave after apparently entering for an initiation rite.

The ambulance drove toward a helipad, from where a helicopter took off shortly after to cheers from a crowd, AP reported. The same process was used on Sunday for at least one of the four boys rescued in the first operation.

After a brief rest, the same divers who brought the first four boys to safety went in again.

At a press conference on Monday afternoon, Narongsak Osottanakorn, former Governor of Chiang Rai province and the head of the joint command centre co-ordinating the operation, said rescue teams re-entered the cave system at 11am local time on Monday (2pm AEST).

Despite the many challenges ahead, and the death of a navy diver days ago, he struck an upbeat note. “I expect in the next hours we will have good news,” he said.

He said he hoped the second phase would be “quicker” than the first operation to extract four boys due to lower water levels.

Mr Narongsak said some of the boys from the Moo Pa Academy soccer squad — which translates as “wild boar” — could emerge mid-evening Sydney time. The boys most up to the challenge of diving in the murky waters would the next to be retrieved.

He said the “water level is not worrisome” even though heavy rains have fallen on the Tham Luang Nang Non cave system.

Thai authorities have also revealed what food the rescued boys craved most once they emerged.

Mr Narongsak said the rescued boys were in good spirits. They were hungry this morning and had requested pad kra pao — a popular dish of spicy basil chicken with rice.

But the four are being kept in isolation, and still won’t be able to embrace their parents — the closest they will get is a wave through a glass screen.

“We are considering to let the parents see the boys. Perhaps visiting them outside the (transparent) glass room,” Mr Narongsak was reported as saying.

The perilous third rescue could be even more dangerous after rescuers today woke to gloomy skies as another thunderstorm looms, following a night of heavy monsoonal rains lashing the mountainous region.

There are concerns that rising floodwaters in the cave complex will complicate rescue efforts and affect the evacuation.

Officials said storms forecast for Chiang Rai province in Thailand’s far north had been factored into their decision to go ahead with a complicated and dangerous plan for the boys aged between 11 and 16 and their coach to dive out of the cave.

Five remain underground including coach Ekkapol Chantawong. The second leg of the risky operation was placed on hold on Sunday as air canisters were replenished along the underwater route to where the boys and their coach have been trapped for almost two weeks. Defibrillators were also put in place in case the rescue should take a bad turn.

Thailand’s Interior Minister Anupong Paojinda revealed the same divers who rescued the four boys were conducting subsequent operations because of their knowledge of the terrain. The announcement came after officials met Monday morning to discuss how to get the second group out of the cave.

Foreign Minister Julie Bishop said lessons from the initial effort would be applied as two more groups of four were brought out of the cave.

“The fact that it took so many hours underscores how precarious this whole mission is,” she said.

Mr Narongsak described the first rescue as “our masterpiece work” and claimed the four rescued boys were in “perfect” health — despite earlier reports that one was being “closely monitored”.

Contrary to initial reports, it’s now believed the weakest boys were selected to come out first, following an assessment by Adelaide cave diver and anaesthetist Dr Richard Harris.

According to CNN, the boys will spend a day or two in isolation, inside a sterilised isolation unit, as a health precaution.

Authorities have so far refused to release the identities or conditions of the four who have escaped.

“Don’t ask these kinds of questions. Not wise questions to ask,” Prime Minister Prayut Chan-O-Cha told reporters in Bangkok on Monday morning when asked about the conditions of the four.

FOUR BOYS RESCUED FROM CAVE

The group of boys, who play in a local soccer team called “Wild Boars”, have been stranded in a cramped chamber of the Tham Luang cave complex since June 23.

When British cave diving specialists found them nine days later, they were cold, dishevelled and malnourished, with several suffering from exhaustion. But the arrival of monsoon rains has made it essential to immediately extract them.

In a race against time amid a heavy downpour, experts concluded their original plan to swim the boys out was the best option.

Thirteen divers entered the cave at 10am Sunday local time (1pm AEST) — some heading straight for the trapped group and others taking up stations along the 3km system of flooded chambers.

Ten rescuers headed to the boys in chamber nine, and to the junction at chamber six, while the others went to support positions shortly afterwards.

Each boy was to wear a full scuba mask, wetsuit, boots and a helmet as they were accompanied by two divers through the cave.

They were to be strapped to a “buddy”, the leading diver, by a tether and dragged along.

This diver was to carry two tanks and share oxygen with the boy as the other followed them through the cold, murky water and airless chambers that have already claimed one life.

The foreign divers and five Thai divers entered the caves after an Australian doctor gave the all clear. Locals were required because none of the foreigners speak Thai and communication before and during the dive was key.

Additional rescue personnel, including divers from Thailand, the US, Australia, China and Europe, were stationed between the third chamber and the entrance, where the boys would have to use a rope to traverse challenging terrain.

Before the Thai rescuers went in, they posted a message on the navy’s Facebook page: “We, the Thai Navy SEALS, along with the international diver team, are ready to bring the soccer team home.”

WHAT WILL HAPPEN NEXT?

Officials said on Sunday night that the extraordinary operation would pause for 10 to 20 hours to assess next steps, check equipment and refill oxygen tanks stationed along the dangerous route. How quickly the remaining boys are moved out will depend on the conditions and water levels inside the cave, which are likely to rise with the rain. The operation could take up to four days to complete and “may stop and start depending on conditions,” Mr Narongsak said.

The governor said officials were “still at war with water and time”, after experts warned him that rain could shrink the dry ledge where the boys are sheltering to just 10 sqm.

“All the plans must not have any holes in them,” he said, noting that “hundreds of people have vetted this” and “there will always be margins for error”.

He said floodwaters had been drained as much as possible, but the rain could increase the risk.

“The plan that I’ve held on to from the beginning is that we have to bring the kids out and the determining factor of this plan is to have as little water as possible.”

He also warned of higher carbon dioxide levels in the cave.

Water levels inside the cave are fluctuating, making it difficult to know for sure how long some of the dives will take.

The death of military diver Saman Kunan on Friday underscored the huge risks the boys face.

Saman was part of a team trying to establish an airline to the chamber where the children were awaiting rescue. He had placed oxygen tanks along the route but didn’t have enough air to get back to safety.

“We lost one man, but we still have faith to carry out our work,” Navy SEAL commander Apakorn vowed.

https://www.news.com.au/world/asia/...k/news-story/fa1065be5883b90002c5b8abb5884c34
 
Thai cave rescue: Boys in good spirits after daring rescue from flooded tunnels, authorities say


The eight members of a Thai boys soccer team who have already been rescued from a flooded cave complex have started to walk around their hospital beds and are eating solid food as they regain strength.

Jesada Chokdumrongsuk, deputy director-general of the Public Health Ministry, said the boys, aged 13 to 16, were now able to eat normal food, but nothing spicy.

He said two of them possibly had a lung infection but all boys were generally "healthy and smiling".

"The kids are footballers so they have high immune systems," he said.

He said the boys were in "high spirits" and happy to be out of the cave, but would have psychological tests after their long ordeal.

The boys in the first group — aged 14-16 — were much hungrier, Dr Chokdumrongsukv said, a sign their bodies were more malnourished.

The boys in the second group were between 13-14, but were in better health overall.

The youngest boy, just 11 years old, is still inside the cave.

The first four boys have now met their parents through a transparent screen.

Medical teams had previously said concerns included hypothermia and an airborne lung infection known as "cave disease", which is caused by bat and bird droppings.

Thai authorities earlier started the third and final phase of the rescue to remove the remaining boys and their soccer coach from the cave as monsoonal rains intensify.

A ninth boy has been rescued from the cave, a rescue official said, and left in an ambulance that was on standby.

The mission, which started on Sunday, is a race against the clock. More heavy rain is expected this week, which would again flood the labyrinthine tunnels with fast-flowing, rising water.

A crack team of foreign divers and Thai Navy SEALS guided four boys on Sunday and a further four on Monday through narrow, submerged channels from the muddy bank deep inside the Tham Luang cave where they had been stranded for more than two weeks.

"All four boys have arrived at hospital, all are safe," Narongsak Osottanakorn, head of the rescue mission, told reporters of those freed on Monday.

Asked whether the remaining four "Wild Boars" and their coach would come out at the same time in the next rescue effort, he said: "It depends on the plan … we have set the plan for four people so if they want to take five out [at the same time], then they need to change the plan."

Yesterday's operation went more smoothly than Sunday's and took two hours less as the practice became more refined, he said.

Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha visited the cave to inspect the operation, with navy rescuers giving him a rousing cheer.

"The Prime Minister said that this kind of event should never happen again on Thai soil," Mr Narongsak said.

"We should learn from this experience to prevent it from happening again."

The players and their coach became trapped on June 23 when it set out to explore the cave after soccer practice and rains flooded the tunnels, trapping them inside.

British divers found the missing team a week ago.

'Rescue has been immense'
But the efforts to rescue the boys — aged between 11 and 16 — have proved a monumental challenge.

Some are not even strong swimmers, and have had to learn to dive in conditions that claimed the life of a former Thai Navy SEAL on Friday.

Thirteen foreign divers and five members of Thailand's elite Navy SEAL unit make up the main team guiding the boys to safety.

Authorities said the boys were being held close to divers and were wearing oxygen masks to enable normal breathing.

"The rescue has been immense," said volunteer helper Somjit Saenset, 56.

"I'm so happy the children came out safely. I want to send my moral support for all involved [in the rest of the mission]."

Phuwadech Kamnguen, a 14-year-old best friend of one of the trapped boys, said he's looking forward to eating KFC with the team again.

"Even when my friends have left the cave, I'm worried about their physical well-being. From what I've seen in the clip, they did look skinny," he said.

The president of soccer's governing body, FIFA, has invited the boys to the World Cup final in Moscow on Sunday if they make it out in time.

http://www.abc.net.au/news/2018-07-10/thai-cave-rescue-rain-god/9961934
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">BREAKING: Thai officials say all twelve boys and their coach have been rescued after being trapped in a cave for 17 days. <a href="https://t.co/8vpbpFx2An">pic.twitter.com/8vpbpFx2An</a></p>— AJ+ (@ajplus) <a href="https://twitter.com/ajplus/status/1016652456522993665?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">July 10, 2018</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
great news. all 12 have been saved.

and could watch the world cup semi and finals.

i wonder if there would be any proceedings agasint the coach now.
 
Wow well done by the foreign divers and Thai Navy Seals
 
Great news.

Those are some strong boys who did not get claustrophobic.
 
Rest in Peace Saman Kunan, the man who gave up his life in attempt to free these boys.
 
Great news. But they should face some sort of punishment now especially the coach. The cave is a no-go especially during the monsoon and the group brazenly ignored warnings in search of thrills. A person lost their life because of their stupidity.
 
Great news. But they should face some sort of punishment now especially the coach. The cave is a no-go especially during the monsoon and the group brazenly ignored warnings in search of thrills. A person lost their life because of their stupidity.

The coach and his team entered the cave on 23rd June and the ban usually commences from first week of July?
How is it the Coach's fault that the rains decided to arrive early this season.
Also the guy kept the morale of kids up during the 12 days while they were stuck inside with the outside world considering them dead.
Heck he even gave up his own ration to kids in order to keep them in healthy condition.
The guy is only 25 and had no idea that this small trip will blow into something this big. Give him a break fgs.
 
The coach and his team entered the cave on 23rd June and the ban usually commences from first week of July?
How is it the Coach's fault that the rains decided to arrive early this season.
Also the guy kept the morale of kids up during the 12 days while they were stuck inside with the outside world considering them dead.
Heck he even gave up his own ration to kids in order to keep them in healthy condition.
The guy is only 25 and had no idea that this small trip will blow into something this big. Give him a break fgs.

Even some parents have given statements in the media that they are grateful to the coach for keeping their sons alive and do not want any law suite against him.
 
FIFA should invite this Football Team to Final. Just about right time available to scrutinise for PTSD and Travel arrangements.

If FIFA doesn't, Thai Govt should.
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-lang="en"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">This victory goes to the heroes of the day, well done boys, you are so strong &#55357;&#56911;&#55356;&#57342; <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/thaicaverescue?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#thaicaverescue</a> <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/chiangrai?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#chiangrai</a> <a href="https://t.co/05wysCSuVy">pic.twitter.com/05wysCSuVy</a></p>— Paul Pogba (@paulpogba) <a href="https://twitter.com/paulpogba/status/1016787181044629505?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">July 10, 2018</a></blockquote>
<script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
Some incredible skills being used by people involved here.

These caves are amazing work of nature.
 
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