Rescue of Thai boys trapped in cave could take months
Food and medical help reached 13 members of a Thai youth football team found rake thin but alive, huddled on a ledge deep inside a flooded cave.
A massive and gruelling international operation was mounted to search for the boys, but has been beset by heavy downpours and fast-moving floodwaters | © AFP | Lillian SUWANRUMPHA
The Thai military said it is providing months’ worth of food and diving lessons to the boys, discovered kilometres into the pitch-black and waterlogged Tham Luang network of caves in the country’s monsoon-drenched north nine days after they went missing, as the focus turned Tuesday to how to get them out.
“How many are you?…thirteen… brilliant,” shouts a British diver, in an astonishing exchange captured in a video of the moment help finally reached the youngsters.
The incredible footage showed the emaciated boys in baggy mud-slicked football jerseys, shielding their eyes from the divers’ torches.
“(We will) prepare to send additional food to be sustained for at least four months and train all 13 to dive while continuing to drain the water,” Navy Captain Anand Surawan said, according to a statement from Thailand’s Armed Forces.
The astonishing rescue sparked jubilation across the country after the country mounted a massive and gruelling operation beset by heavy downpours and fast-moving floodwaters.
“We called this ‘mission impossible’ because it rained every day… but with our determination and equipment we fought nature,” Chiang Rai governor Narongsak Osottanakorn said Tuesday.
In the video, posted on the Thai Navy SEAL Facebook page, one of the boys shouts to the rescuers: “we are hungry.. shall we go outside?”
In response the British diver says: “Many, many people are coming… we are the first,” in reference to the vast and complex rescue operation that has taken over the mountainside.
‘Unimaginable’ rescue
The harrowing task of getting the boys out is complicated by the fact that they are in a weak state and are not experienced divers.
Experts said it could take weeks — if not months — to get them out with much of the cave still submerged by floods.
If diving proves impossible, there is a outside chance they can be drilled out or wait for waters to recede and walk out on foot.
The priority is to rehabilitate the group before they start the tricky journey out, officials said, reluctant to offer a concrete timeline.
Relatives — and much of Thailand — exploded with relief and jubilation on getting the news the team were alive and safe.
“It’s unimaginable. I’ve been waiting for 10 days, I never imagined this day would come,” the father of one of the boys said.
The “Wild Boar” team became trapped on June 23 after heavy rains blocked the cave’s main entrance.
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