Millennium Post

Heroic divers beat the odds to pull off miraculous rescue

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MAE SAI: The final five members of a young football team were rescued from a flooded Thai cave on Tuesday after spending 18 harrowing days trapped deep inside, completing an extraordin­ary against-theodds rescue mission that captivated the world.

Elite foreign divers and Thai Navy SEALS extracted the final batch of four boys, plus the 25-yearold coach, Tuesday afternoon via a treacherou­s escape route that required them to squeeze through narrow, water-filled tunnels.

“All 12 ‘Wild Boars’ and coach have been extracted from the cave,” the SEALS said in a Facebook post, referring to the boys by the name of their football team.

The boys, aged from 11 to 16, and their coach, ventured into the Tham Luang cave in mountainou­s northern Thailand on June 23 after football practice and got trapped when heavy rains caused flooding forcing to take shelter on a muddy ledge.

They spent nine days in darkness until two British divers found them, looking gaunt but otherwise offering smiles to the divers and appearing to be in remarkably good spirits.

But the initial euphoria at finding them dissipated as authoritie­s struggled to devise a safe plan to get them out, with the shelf more than four kilometres (2.5 miles) inside the cave and the labyrinth of tunnels leading to them filled with water.

Authoritie­s mulled ideas such as drilling holes into the mountain or waiting months until monsoon rains ended and they could walk out, with the rescue chief at one point dubbing the efforts to save them “Mission Impossible”.

With oxygen levels in their chamber falling to dangerous levels and monsoon rains threatenin­g to flood the cave above the ledge where the boys were sheltering, rescuers decided on the least-worst option of having divers escort them out through the tunnels.

The escape route was a challenge for even experience­d divers. The boys had no previous diving experience, so the rescuers trained them how to use a mask and breathe underwater via an oxygen tank.

One fear had been that they would panic while trying to swim underwater, even with a diver

escorting them. The death of a former Thai Navy SEAL diver who ran out of oxygen in a flooded area of the cave on Friday underscore­d the dangers of the escape route.

The ups and downs of the rescue bid entranced Thailand and also fixated a global audience, drawing support from celebritie­s as varied as US President Donald Trump, football star Lionel Messi and tech guru Elon Musk.

British Prime Minister Theresa May was one of the first world leaders to celebrate the success, and pay tribute to the divers who risked their own lives to save the boys.

Now they are out; concerns are set to focus on the physical and mental toll of the ordeal.

Experts warned that drinking contaminat­ed water or otherwise being exposed to bird or bat droppings in the cave could lead to dangerous infections.

They also said counsellin­g would be needed to deal with the psychologi­cal trauma of spending so long not knowing whether they were going to survive.

 ??  ?? An emergency team rushes to a helicopter believed to be carrying one of the rescued boys from the flooded cave in Mae Sai as divers in the Mae Sai district of Chiang Rai province, northern Thailand, Tuesday
An emergency team rushes to a helicopter believed to be carrying one of the rescued boys from the flooded cave in Mae Sai as divers in the Mae Sai district of Chiang Rai province, northern Thailand, Tuesday

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