The Borneo Post

Foreign divers seach for teens

Around 1,000 Navy SEAL divers, police, soldiers, border guards, officials mobilised for around-the-clock rescue

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MAE SAI, Thailand: A team of US military personnel and British divers joined rescue efforts at a flooded cave in northern Thailand where 12 children and their football coach have been trapped for five days as heavy overnight rains hampered the search.

Flood waters seeped into a second chamber of the Tham Luang cave and forced some of the rescue divers to turn back, according to officials.

The children, aged between 11 and 16, went into the cave Saturday and were trapped when heavy rains clogged the main entrance.

Around 1,000 Navy SEAL divers, police, soldiers, border guards and officials have been mobilised for the around-the- clock rescue in a remote and mountainou­s part of Chiang Rai province near the Laos and Myanmar borders.

A team of American military personnel from the US Pacific Command, including pararescue and survival specialist­s, arrived at the site overnight to help rescue operations, according to embassy spokeswoma­n Jillian Bonnardeau­x.

“Operators are trained in personnel recovery tactics and techniques and procedures,” she told AFP.

“Essentiall­y, what they’re looking at is assessing with the Thai authoritie­s the potential courses of action and complement­ing the efforts underway.”

Three British cave diving experts made a second attempt at entering the cave through chimneys yesterday after they tried to go in through the main entrance on the day before but were turned around by rushing flood waters.

At nearly 10 kilometres, Tham Luang cave is one of the longest in Thailand and has the reputation of being one of the toughest, even among experience­d divers.

It frequently floods during Thailand’s monsoon season between July and November, rendering some of its narrow passages difficult to pass through.

There are several air pockets within the complex and the kids are believed to be in a large chamber in the middle of the cave.

But fast-running and murky flood waters have prevented rescue divers from reaching them and heavy rains continue to seep into the cave through narrow openings on the sides and through the main entrance.

“The water is like cafe latte, you

Essentiall­y what they’re looking at is assessing with the Thai authoritie­s the potential courses of action and complement­ing the efforts underway. Jillian Bonnardeau­x, US embassy spokeswoma­n

can’t see anything, and there’s a very strong flow which doesn’t make it easy,” Ben Reymenants, owner of Blue Label Diving in Thailand, told AFP from Chiang Rai where he was assisting with the search.

High-pressure water pumps shipped in from Bangkok were set up but water levels continued to rise Thursday.

Officials said they planned to drill a hole into the cave on Friday and dispatched drones to find an ideal site for the hole.

“It’s difficult to drill vertically, if you go up the mountain and drill there are high risks (of collapse) so we might drill from the the side to improve our chances of success,” Suttisak Soralump, a geotechnic­al expert from Kasetsart University told AFP.

Border guards scoured the site for new openings into the cave and the boys’ families brought clothing belonging to the kids to help sniffer dogs find the team.

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 ??  ?? Two British cave-divers (second and third left) with Thai army soldiers and local rescue personnel are seen searching for new openings in the mountain of Khun Nam Nang Non Forest Park. Relatives pray as they keep vigil in Khun Nam Nang Non Forest Park near Than Luang cave while rescue personnel conduct operation for the missing teens and their coach. — AFP photos
Two British cave-divers (second and third left) with Thai army soldiers and local rescue personnel are seen searching for new openings in the mountain of Khun Nam Nang Non Forest Park. Relatives pray as they keep vigil in Khun Nam Nang Non Forest Park near Than Luang cave while rescue personnel conduct operation for the missing teens and their coach. — AFP photos
 ??  ?? Traders and riot police are seen at the smoulderin­g scene of fire that gutted down the timber dealership of the Gikomba market and nearby homes in central Nairobi, Kenya.
Traders and riot police are seen at the smoulderin­g scene of fire that gutted down the timber dealership of the Gikomba market and nearby homes in central Nairobi, Kenya.
 ??  ?? Rescue workers remove the body of a man from an apartment at the smoulderin­g scene of the fire. — Reuters photo
Rescue workers remove the body of a man from an apartment at the smoulderin­g scene of the fire. — Reuters photo
 ??  ?? Thai soldiers and rescuers are seen at the Tham Luang cave during a rescue operation.
Thai soldiers and rescuers are seen at the Tham Luang cave during a rescue operation.
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 ??  ?? A Thai military officer (second right) briefs US military personnel at a command outpost.
A Thai military officer (second right) briefs US military personnel at a command outpost.

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