Deccan Chronicle

4 more rescued from cave

4 boys, coach inside tunnel; 8 saved in ongoing high-stakes rescue ops

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Thailand, July 9: Four more of the youth soccer players trapped for over two weeks in a flooded cave in northern Thailand were brought out on Monday, an official said, bringing to eight the number extracted in the ongoing high-stakes rescue operation.

“The eighth person is out and the operation is done for today,” Sitthichai Klangpatta­na, flag officer to Thailand's navy SEAL commander, told The

Associated Press. “Four boys were brought out today.”

He didn't comment on the health of the boys or how well the operation had gone. After Monday's rescue effort, four boys and their coach were still inside the labyrinth cave.

On Sunday, when the high-risk rescue operation to rescue the 12 boys and their coach began, teams of divers brought out four of the boys but waited several hours before confirming their safe rescue.

The Facebook page of the Thai Navy SEALs, who have been central to the rescue operation, was updated Monday night to say “two days, eight boars” - a reference to the Wild Boars, the name of the boys' soccer team. The message, like most posted by the SEALs, ended with the fighting cheer adopted from the U.S. Navy: Hooyah.

Chiang Rai acting Gov. Narongsak Osatanakor­n said earlier Monday that the second phase began at 11 a.m. and authoritie­s “hope to hear good news in the next few hours.”

“All conditions are still as good as they were yesterday,” Narongsak told a news conference. “The boys' strength, the plan today we are ready like before. And we will do it faster because we are afraid of the rain.”

Authoritie­s have been rushing to extract the boys, ages 11-16, and their coach from the cave as the annual monsoon bears down on the mountainou­s region in far northern Chiang Rai province. Workers have been laboring around the clock to pump water out of the cave, and authoritie­s said Monday that heavy downpours overnight did not raise water levels inside.

The four boys guided from the cave Sunday in an urgent and dangerous operation that involved them diving through the cave's dark, tight and twisting passages were happy and in good health, authoritie­s said.

“This morning they said they were hungry and wanted to eat khao pad grapao,” Narongsak said, referring to a Thai dish of meat fried with chili and basil and served over rice.

Still, the four were undergoing medical checks in a hospital in the provincial capital and were not yet allowed close contact with relatives due to fear of infections.

FACEBOOK page of the Thai Navy SEALs, who have been central to the rescue operation, was updated Monday night to say “two days, eight boars” - a reference to the Wild Boars, the name of the boys' soccer team.

PHASE-II rescue ops began at 11 am.

 ?? AP ?? This frame grab from video tweeted by Elon Musk shows a “tiny kid-sized submarine” being tested in a pool at Palisades Charter High School, on Sunday, in Pacific Palisades, Calif. Musk’s Space X rocket company tested the submarine that could...
AP This frame grab from video tweeted by Elon Musk shows a “tiny kid-sized submarine” being tested in a pool at Palisades Charter High School, on Sunday, in Pacific Palisades, Calif. Musk’s Space X rocket company tested the submarine that could...

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