The Scotsman

WHAT ARE THE RESCUE OPTIONS?

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● 1. Diving: The group could be taught to swim through the passages using scuba equipment. But with almost a mile of tunnels, the task is not one suited to beginners. There is also the problem of rising water levels. Search efforts were hampered last week after heavy rain rushed into the cave network, raising water levels and creating strong currents that made diving more or less impossible. The dives into the cave so far have already been a challenge. Bill Whitehouse, vice-chairman of the British Cave Rescue Council, told BBC Breakfast the operation to free the group is “a real braintease­r”. He said aside from teaching the group to dive, another option is to get divers to bring them out, but said he does not know if that is realistica­lly possible. ● 2. Wait and re-supply: Rescuers could wait for the water level to drop, which some officials are reported to fear could take months. Experts have said it could be safer to supply them where they are for now, but this could mean a long wait as the country’s rainy season typically lasts into October. Mr Whitehouse said one of the positives is that air and water temperatur­es in Thailand are a lot warmer, pointing out that hypothermi­a would probably have set in by now in the UK. But with more monsoon rains on the way, potentiall­y causing water levels to rise, supplying the group and attempting to extract them could be complicate­d. ● 3. Drill and airlift: Drilling into the chamber and airlifting the group out is another option, but this sort of extraction is thought to be a dangerous one. Rescuers have searched for other possible entrances and drilling equipment has been sent, but creating a shaft large enough for the group to be extracted would be a difficult task. The cave stretches under a mountainsi­de for up to six miles and the rocky ground varies in elevation. It is estimated that the boys are half a mile below the surface.

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