Irish Daily Mail

Thai cave boys WERE sedated for daring rescue

As gripping footage of underwater mission is revealed, Thai prime minister admits they medicated the children to stop them panicking

- news@dailymail.ie From Sam Greenhill, in Chiang Rai, Thailand

Not completely unconsciou­s

THE schoolboys rescued from a flooded cave system in Thailand were dosed with an anti-anxiety drug to stop them panicking during the terrifying underwater mission, the country’s prime minister has admitted.

The authoritie­s had previously denied the children were drugged but Prayut Chan-oCha confirmed that they had been given an anxiolytic ‘to make them not excited, not stressed’.

The rescue was carried out by an elite team of internatio­nal divers who guided the sluggish youngsters along the tortuous four-kilometre escape route.

One of the British divers, who led the team said: ‘I was told the boys were given a dose of ketamine [a horse tranquilli­ser often used as a recreation­al drug] to keep them calm.’ An American military diver added: ‘Those kids were proper knocked out.’

Fernando Raigal, a Spanish diver who took part in the rescue, said: ‘The boys were sedated – they were unconsciou­s.’

But Mr Prayut denied this, saying: ‘All of the children were conscious during the operation.’

Extraordin­ary video footage shows how the boys were carted on stretchers for sections of the tunnel not flooded. In underwater parts, they were pulled along in a dream-like state by divers.

The treacherou­s conditions in the cave system were laid bare in the video released by Thai navy

Seals yesterday. It shows divers preparing to plunge into murky brown waters likened to ‘cold coffee’.

Contrary to the idea that the children would swim out, they appear to be motionless in the video as they are passed along a chain of rescuers including Thai navy personnel and volunteers from around the world.

In one section of film shot in a dry part of the cave system, six rescuers grip the handles of a tough plastic cradle carrying their precious young cargo. Other helpers heave on ropes to haul the children up steep sections.

Wrapped in foil blankets to keep them warm, the boys are threaded through a claustroph­obic tunnel compared to the ‘S-bend’ of a toilet. They are then lowered down steep drops and pulled through terrifying­ly narrow choke points.

At one point, a boy can be seen waving his hand slightly and gripping his fingers into a fist, suggesting they were not completely unconsciou­s.

None of the children could previously swim and it is clear from the footage that rescuers had been too worried that they might panic

underwater to risk trusting them to simply scuba dive out of the flooded cave system.

Thai navy commander Chaiyanant­a Peeranaron­g said: ‘Some of them were asleep, some of them were wiggling their fingers... [as if] groggy, but they were breathing.’

He added doctors were stationed along the corridors of the Tham Luang cave to check constantly on the boys’ condition and pulse.

The video footage shows how engineers preparing for the operation had carved neat steps into steep slopes in the tunnels to make it easier, although they were cascading with water.

Rescuers also had to step over

miles of tubes that had been laid down to pump out water.

The children were kept in special full-face diving masks even over the dry sections because of dwindling oxygen undergroun­d.

When they finally emerged, they were given sunglasses to protect their eyes from the sunlight and carried to waiting helicopter­s. One of the American rescue specialist­s involved in the mission, Derek Anderson, 32, said the boys and their coach had been ‘incredibly resilient… and discussed staying strong, having the will to live, having the will to survive’.

The rescue began on Sunday, when four boys were extracted.

Four more were brought out on Monday and the final four and their 25-year-old coach on Tuesday.

Mr Anderson said divers practised their rescue techniques in a swimming pool with local children about the same height and weight as the members of the Wild Boars team trapped in the cave.

The aim was to make each of the boys ‘tightly packaged’ so divers could keep control of them and adjust their air supply as needed. Mr Anderson said the so-called positive pressure diving masks used by the boys were ‘crucial’. Their use meant that even if a boy panicked during the rescue and

got water inside his mask, the pressure would expel it.

Mr Anderson said: ‘We were extremely fortunate that the outcome was the way it was.’

It emerged last night that the pumps draining water from the cave dramatical­ly failed shortly after the final boy was rescued causing water levels within the cave to rise rapidly. Head of the rescue, Narongsak Osottanako­rn, said yesterday the cave will be turned into ‘a living museum’.

Australian doctor Dr Richard Harris, who stayed with the boys in the cave, was told shortly after the mission his father had died.

 ??  ?? Rescue workers carry the boy, who appears to be sleeping, through the flooded cave 4
Rescue workers carry the boy, who appears to be sleeping, through the flooded cave 4
 ??  ?? 1 Precious cargo: One of the boys secured on a stretcher being moved inside the cave
1 Precious cargo: One of the boys secured on a stretcher being moved inside the cave
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3
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