Los Angeles Times

Thai boys prepare for evacuation

Soccer team trapped in cave practices with diving masks in hopes of possible rescue.

- By Shashank Bengali and George Styllis

MAE SAI, Thailand — Some smiling, some dozing in foil blankets, the 12 boys trapped in a cave in northern Thailand were captured on new videos released Wednesday as navy medics tended to their wounds and divers continued to prepare them for a possible swim to safety.

The boys and their 25year-old soccer coach were in good health, but officials said it was still too soon to attempt to extract them from more than one mile inside the cave.

The boys were practicing wearing scuba masks and breathing, the first step in what could be an extremely challengin­g underwater swim — accompanie­d by naval divers — through the dark, narrow and partially flooded passageway­s of the cave complex in Thailand’s Chiang Rai province.

None of the boys has experience with diving equipment, and only some are believed to know how to swim. But Thai media reported that a rope was being installed along the route to guide the evacuation.

“We have to be 100% sure,” said the provincial governor, Narongsak Osatanakor­n, adding that rescue divers might not evacuate all 13 at the same time.

“Some might be ready before others,” Narongsak said. “If they’re not ready or it’s too risky, we will not take them out.”

One diver assisting in the rescue effort, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, said the boys would need to carry out a two-hour underwater dive to reach the cave’s third chamber, where crews have establishe­d a makeshift command post stocked with food, oxygen and other equipment. From there it would be relatively less difficult to make their way back out of the cave the way they entered, officials say.

The boys were trapped while exploring the cave after soccer practice on June 23 when rains filled the complex with water, blocking their exit. They were stuck for 10 days before rescuers found them Monday.

The rescue effort, which has riveted the nation and generated world headlines, was further complicate­d by heavy monsoon rains forecast for this weekend.

Teams were using highpowere­d pumps to drain as much water as possible from the Tham Luang Nang Non cave, perhaps lowering the water levels to the point where the group could float to safety, but further rains would stymie that effort.

Authoritie­s also said they had constructe­d a temporary dam to divert a stream that was flowing into the cave, adding to the water levels.

“The water has decreased a lot, but when it’s raining, we can’t fight it,” Narongsak said. “If it doesn’t rain, we can have good results. Time is limited in getting the kids out.”

The boys were being looked after by a rotating team of Thai navy SEALs and medics who were staying with them on a dry outcroppin­g above a partially flooded chamber of the maze-like, six-mile-long cave.

A fiber-optic line was being establishe­d so the children could talk to their relatives, many of whom have been holding vigil near the mouth of the cave, although they had not spoken to them yet.

In a video shot Tuesday and released by the Royal Thai Navy on its Facebook page, a medic applies brown disinfecta­nt to the wounded feet of one skinny boy, still wearing his soccer uniform.

The diver holding the video camera then points the lens at another boy, who holds up two fingers and smiles.

shashank.bengali @latimes.com Twitter: @SBengali Bengali, South Asia correspond­ent for The Times, reported from Karachi, Pakistan. Special correspond­ent Styllis reported from Mae Sai.

 ?? Thai navy SEALs via Getty Images ?? ANY RESCUE effort of the 12 boys and their coach could be further complicate­d by heavy monsoon rains.
Thai navy SEALs via Getty Images ANY RESCUE effort of the 12 boys and their coach could be further complicate­d by heavy monsoon rains.

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