Malta Independent

A day-by-day look at the Thailand cave ordeal

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A day-by-day look at the ordeal of 12 boys and their soccer coach who were trapped deep inside a flooded cave in northern Thailand for more than two weeks:

23 June

After morning practice, 12 members of the local Wild Boars youth soccer team cycle with their 25year-old coach to the Tham Luang Nang Non cave to explore it, when heavy rains start pouring. When none of the boys return home after dark and cannot be contacted, parents report them missing. Their bicycles are found parked and locked at the cave entrance as a search begins around midnight.

24 June

Search and rescue teams comprising local authoritie­s, the police and rescue workers find soccer shoes and backpacks left behind by the boys near the cave entrance.

25 June

Thai navy SEALs join the search effort. As the search expands, handprints and footprints thought to belong to the boys are found farther from the cave entrance. Parents holding a vigil outside begin prayer sessions.

26 June

As the searchers penetrate the cave, Thai Interior Minister Anupong Paojinda tells reporters they are seriously handicappe­d by muddy water that has filled some chambers of the large cave to their ceilings.

27 June

More heavy rainfall stymies search efforts, flooding undergroun­d passages faster than water can be pumped out. A US military team and British cave experts, along with several other private teams of foreign cavers, join the operation.

28 June

Efforts begin to drain groundwate­r from the cave by drilling from outside into the mountain. A search for other entrances to the cave intensifie­s as diving is temporaril­y suspended for safety reasons.

29 June

Thai Prime Minister Prayuth Chanocha visits the cave site and urges relatives of the missing not to give up hope. Efforts to drain the cave with pumps make little progress.

30 June

The effort to locate the missing picks up pace again, as a break in the rain eases flooding in the system of caverns and more experts from around the world, including Australia and China, join the rescue mission. In anticipati­on of finding the boys, an evacuation drill is held to practise how they will be sent to a hospital after leaving the cave.

1 July

Rescue divers advance into the main passageway inside the flooded cave and set up a staging area inside. Thai navy SEALs reach a bend where the kilometre(half-mile-) long passage splits in two directions.

2 July

Two expert British cave divers locate the missing boys and their coach. They record a video of the boys talking with them.

3 July

Thai navy SEALs bring in food and medicine. Videos are released and show the boys taking turns introducin­g themselves, folding their hands together in a traditiona­l Thai greeting and saying their names. The boys also say they are healthy.

4 July

A total of seven navy SEALs and a doctor are now in place to stay with the boys. Options are discussed about whether the boys should be taken out of the cave with divers soon or kept in place until conditions improve.

5 July

The boys continue with diving lessons in case a decision is made to extract them through a route that is partially underwater. The effort to pump out water in increased.

6 July

Officials indicate that they favour extracting the boys as soon as possible, fearing further danger if they are forced to stay inside by more rain causing additional flooding. Concern increases about falling oxygen levels inside the cave. A former navy SEAL aiding the rescue effort dies from a lack of oxygen during his mission.

7 July

Letters that the boys and their coach wrote to the boys’ parents are made public. Officials suggest that an underwater evacuation will be made in the following few days because of prediction­s of a rainstorm. However, they say the boys’ diving skills are not yet where they need to be.

8 July

The official heading the rescue operation declares that “D-Day” has arrived as he announces the start of the operation to bring the boys and their coach out of the cave. Divers take four of the boys out through tight passages and flooded caverns.

9 July

Divers take four more boys to safety during the second day of the rescue operation. This leaves four boys and their coach still inside the cave.

10 July

On the third day of the rescue operation, divers bring out the remaining four boys and their coach, ending an ordeal that lasted more than two weeks.

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