Global Times

Thai rescuers predict ‘good news’ in second mission to save trapped soccer team

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Rescue workers dived deep inside a flooded Thai cave for a second straight day Monday in a treacherou­s bid to save a trapped group of young footballer­s, with the mission chief promising more “good news” after four of the 13 were saved.

Sunday’s surprising­ly quick extraction of the initial batch of four, who were guided out of a network of flooded tunnels by elite divers, fuelled optimism that the others would also be quickly rescued.

“All the equipment is ready. Oxygen bottles are ready,” rescue operations chief Narongsak Osottanako­rn told reporters on Monday afternoon after announcing the second phase of the rescue bid had begun.

“In the next few hours we will have good news.”

Thais have been fixated on the crisis, hoping desperatel­y for the safe return of the 12 boys and their 25-year-old football coach, after they ventured into the Tham Luang cave complex after practice and became trapped by rising waters on June 23.

The saga has also dominated global headlines, with the team spending nine days unaccounte­d for inside the cave, before British divers found the emaciated and dishevelle­d group huddling on a muddy bank above the flooding.

Authoritie­s then struggled to determine the best way to save the “Wild Boar” football team, with the group stuck on a shelf more than four kilometers inside the cave in pitch darkness.

Among the ideas were drilling an escape route through the mountain, or leaving them for months until the monsoon season ended and the flooding subsided.

But with oxygen levels inside dropping to dangerous lows and the prospect of heavy rains flooding the area completely, authoritie­s decided they had to move quickly and take the group out through the water-filled tunnels.

Dozens of foreign divers and other experts from around the world were brought to help the rescue effort, working alongside Thai Navy SEALs.

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