The New Zealand Herald

World holds its breath for trapped boys

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As countries in our part of the world awoke yesterday to the news that four of the 12 boys in a Thai cave had been rescued, millions of hearts leapt with relief. At last, divers had proved it could be done. Four brave boys, with no underwater skills previously, had been brought through flooded undergroun­d caverns and helped to squeeze through narrow passages in darkness — in a journey of over four kilometres and several hours — to safety.

The relief for their waiting parents can be imagined. It would have been shared by the parents of the other eight young footballer­s and their coach still trapped far undergroun­d. At least all now knew that it was possible to get through, a possibilit­y that had seemed to diminish after the death last Thursday of an experience­d diver who ran out of oxygen as he was delivering air tanks through the cave network.

With monsoon rain forecast this week and oxygen levels falling in the caves, the options were closing. The boys could not be left there with supplies to await the end of the monsoon in October. A decision was made to start getting them out. Considerin­g the boys’ weakened condition, their natural fear at the prospect of plunging into dark, dirty water, wearing breathing apparatus and clutching a guide rope, and the threat of panic underwater, the rescue was high risk.

It still is. The fact that the rescue of the remaining eight boys and their coach was suspended yesterday while oxygen was pumped into their cavern suggests the risk is increasing with time. It was raining heavily in the area yesterday, a day earlier than predicted. Every hour that passed yesterday with no word of rescue work resuming sounded more ominous.

Some of the boys, aged 11-16, would have been in weaker condition than others, some would have been more frightened than others. For the rescue of the first four, the diver teams reportedly matched up two of the stronger boys with two of the weaker, which proved to be a success.

Even so, there remains a high risk of a tragedy. If all 12 boys, the coach and the diving teams are safely out of the caves this morning it will be wonderful. But if at least one of them has succumbed as the former Navy Seal did last week, it would be no wonder, though it would cast a pall over the impressive rescue effort the world has watched with hope against foreboding.

The rescue operation has involved as many as 90 divers, at least 50 of them foreigners, including Thai Navy Seals. The pumping equipment set up in the remote mountainou­s forest of northern Thailand managed to remove 190 million litres over a relatively dry spell last week. By Sunday, when the decision was taken to start bringing the boys out, the pumps had made some of the passages walkable. They may not be so after yesterday’s rain.

The whole operation was expected to take several days. Every young life saved is cause for celebratio­n. If they all can be saved, it will be a happy ending to a story that has had the world united in anxiety.

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