Daily Dispatch

Thai boys visit temple to pray and pay tribute to diver

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Members of the Wild Boars football team rescued from a cave in northern Thailand prayed for good luck at a Buddhist temple yesterday morning after spending their first night back home with family.

The teammates and coach were discharged from hospital on Wednesday after recuperati­ng for a week from their 18day ordeal inside Tham Luang cave with no food and only rainwater to drink.

Authoritie­s organised a tightly controlled press conference with the boys that evening in which they recounted drinking water that dripped from rocks and trying to dig their way out during the first nine days before they were located by British divers.

After spending a night at home, many of the boys attended a ceremony the next morning at Wat Pha That Doi Wao in Mae Sai near the Myanmar border where they prayed for longevity and a good life.

They also paid tribute to former Thai Navy Seal diver Saman Kunan, who ran out of oxygen and died while helping resupply air tanks along the cave’s narrow passageway­s. He was the only casualty in the otherwise successful operation dubbed “Mission Impossible”.

Holding hands together in prayer, the boys sat together in the temple while chants of Buddhist monks filled the room.

Officials have advised families of the youngsters to avoid interviews with the media for one month to let them settle back into their normal routines.

The boys will not resume their studies just yet, spending time at home with their families instead, authoritie­s said.

But cameras flashed away as the boys entered the temple yesterday in a sign of the ongoing interest in the story.

Film production houses have said they are looking into a Hollywood-style treatment of the harrowing ordeal, which captivated people around the world as the risky operation to extract the team unfolded.

They walked into the cave on June 23 after football practice, thinking they would only be there for an hour to explore, and then vanished for days.

Foreign divers and Thai Navy Seals spent three days bringing the boys out by carrying them through the waterlogge­d corridors of Tham Luang.

The youngsters, aged 11 to 16, wore full-face oxygen masks and were sedated to keep them calm during the high-stakes operation.

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