Khaleej Times

Dark and treacherou­s journey to safety by boys and divers

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tham luang cave — As the world holds its breath, 12 boys and their soccer coach — accompanie­d by an elite team of rescue divers — are making a treacherou­s journey to safety through flooded undergroun­d caverns that have tested some of the world’s best cavers.

Four boys have so far completed the hazardous escape, according to rescue officials, and are receiving medical treatment. Efforts to bring the remaining eight boys and their adult coach to the surface will resume on Monday morning.

The boys were each being led by two divers as they wind 4 kilometres through pitch darkness, trudge through thick mud, clamber over slippery jagged rocks and dive through narrow passageway­s swirling with cold, strong currents.

“It’s dangerous to the most experience­d divers to go through,” said one diver who spoke to Reuters. “It’s pretty scary.”

The cave system, in a limestone mountain range bordering Myanmar in northern Thailand, has

It’s very dark inside even with the spotlight. Most of the time we work with our instinct, in some position, alone in silence and in the dark. A former veteran Navy SEAL

proven to be a formidable challenge for the internatio­nal rescue coalition drawing some of the world’s best divers who have volunteere­d to help in the operation alongside Thai Navy SEALs.

Dubbed “D-day” by the rescue team leader, the divers entered the wide cave mouth on Sunday morning to begin extracting the boys, accompanie­d by a whole contingent of emergency workers.

One cave explorer who has been inside the Tham Luang cave complex described it a “labyrinth”, adding it was much more difficult to navigate than any other he had experience­d.

The first, nearly 1 kilometre (0.6 mile) long section from where the boys have been huddling in darkness is believed to be the most difficult, requiring a long dive and crawling through mud and debris, with some crevices barely wide enough for a person. “The hole is really small, I have to take off my air tank to crawl through it,” a 25-year-old Thai Navy SEAL who declined to be named, told Reuters before the rescue attempt.

“As I do, I feel the edges of the hole on both my back and chest.”

The British Cave Rescue Council, which has sent seven divers to assist in the rescue, said the death of a former Thai Navy SEAL last Friday as he dived within the cave was a reminder of the risks.

“This demonstrat­es in stark terms, the dangers associated with the cave environmen­t, especially those characteri­sed by long sections of passage with deep water or those entirely filled with water,” the associatio­n wrote on its website. Falling oxygen levels, and with many of the boys not able to swim well, present further risks should they panic as they are guided slowly through the pitch-black waters. “It’s very dark inside even with the spotlight,” a former veteran SEAL, who had been recalled for this mission, told Reuters.

“Most of the time we work with our instinct, in some position, alone in silence and in the dark.”

 ?? AFP ?? An ambulance carrying some of the rescued boys heads to a hospital in Chiang Rai. —
AFP An ambulance carrying some of the rescued boys heads to a hospital in Chiang Rai. —

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