The Welland Tribune

Parents visit rescued soccer team

Children doing well, say doctors, as they recuperate from long cave ordeal

- STEPHEN WRIGHT AND KAWEEWIT KAEWJINDA

MAE SAI, THAILAND — The 12 boys rescued from deep within a flooded cave in northern Thailand made two-finger victory signs from their hospital beds on Wednesday in a moving video from the isolation ward where they’re recuperati­ng from their 18-day ordeal.

The youngest, 11, appeared asleep under a crisp white sheet. Others, including their 25-year-old soccer coach, who had been trapped in the cave along with the boys, sat in bed, their faces obscured by green surgical masks.

Nurses chatted with them and the boys responded with the customary Thai sign of respect — hands pressed together while bowing the head.

Parents watched and waved from behind a glass barrier, their faces vivid with emotion.

“Don’t need to worry about their physical health and even more so for their mental health,” said Chaiwetch Thanapaisa­l, director of Chiang Rai Prachanukr­oh Hospital.

“Everyone is strong in mind and heart,” he said at a news conference of officials involved in the high-risk rescue effort.

The four boys and soccer coach brought out Tuesday on the final day of an all-out threeday push to save all of them had recovered more quickly than the boys rescued on Sunday and Monday, Chaiwetch said.

Even so, all need to be monitored in the hospital for seven days and then rest at home for another 30 days, he said. Three have slight lung infections.

Another video released on Facebook by the Thai Navy SEALs, who were central to the rescue, apparently shows one of the boys being carried through part of the muddy cave on a stretcher covered by an emergency thermal blanket.

The SEALs commander, Rear Adm. Apakorn Youkongkae, said the boys’ coach, Ekkapol Chantawong, told SEALs the order the boys should be rescued in.

“I haven’t asked the coach yet why he chose that order,” he said. “The coach was the one to choose.”

The group had entered the sprawling Tham Luang cave to go exploring after soccer practice on June 23, but monsoon rains soon filled the tight passageway­s, blocking their escape. They were found by a pair of British divers nearly 10 days later, huddled on a small, dry shelf just above the water, smiling with relief but visibly skinny.

The complex mission for internatio­nal and Thai divers to guide the boys and coach through the cave’s flooded passageway­s riveted people worldwide. Highlighti­ng the dangers, a former Thai navy SEAL volunteeri­ng to work on the rescue effort died Friday while replenishi­ng oxygen canisters that were placed along the escape route.

Narongsak Osatanakor­n, the official overseeing the rescue operation, said the boys should not be blamed for their near tragedy. He lauded the co-operation between Thai and internatio­nal rescuers.

“The situation went beyond just being a rescue mission and became a symbol of unity among mankind,” he said. “Everyone worked together without discrimina­tion of race or religion as the ultimate goal was to save the youth football team.”

Officials plan an interactiv­e museum at Tham Luang based on the historic rescue mission that will feature items such as clothing that key rescuers wore during the operation, Narongsak said.

Each of the boys, ages 11-16 and with no diving experience, was guided out by divers though rocky, muddy and water-filled passages that in places were just a crawl space.

The method was extremely risky, but dwindling oxygen levels in the cave and fears of more monsoon rains to come made a decision urgent. Relatively mild weather and a massive effort to pump out water created a window of opportunit­y. And the confidence of the diving team, and expertise specific to the cave, grew after its first successful mission Sunday.

Thongchai Lertwilair­atanapong, a public health inspector, said the boys lost an average of just 2 kilograms by the time they came out, as they were fed and nourished for several days on site before being removed. They had been reported as quite thin on discovery.

“To not receive food, we can still survive for many months, but what’s necessary is water, which the cave has, and around this time there’s a lot in the cave, and they chose clean water to drink,” he said.

 ?? THAILAND GOVERNMENT HANDOUT PHOTO THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? In this image made from video, released by the Thailand Government Spokesman Bureau, three of the 12 boys are seen recovering in their hospital beds after being rescued along with their coach from a flooded cave in Mae Sai, Chiang Rai province,...
THAILAND GOVERNMENT HANDOUT PHOTO THE ASSOCIATED PRESS In this image made from video, released by the Thailand Government Spokesman Bureau, three of the 12 boys are seen recovering in their hospital beds after being rescued along with their coach from a flooded cave in Mae Sai, Chiang Rai province,...

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