The Mercury

Miracle cave rescue completed

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HONKING car hooters and live selfie videos – this is how many Thais in the northern city of Chiang Rai and beyond celebrated yesterday after all 12 boys and their soccer coach had been safely rescued from a labyrinthi­ne cave complex.

The dramatic rescue marks the end of a more than twoweek ordeal which began when the Wild Boars team and their coach became trapped inside the flooded Tham Luang cave on the border with Myanmar on June 23.

Two British divers found the 13 last Monday but the search and rescue operation has largely been driven by Thailand’s elite navy SEAL unit.

“This is an important event in my life. It is something I will remember,” said a visibly emotional Rachapol Ngamgrabua­n, an official at Chiang Rai’s provincial press office.

“There were times when I cried,” he said. “Happy. Very happy to see all Thai people love each other.”

Thais have been glued to their television­s, cellphones and computer screens following every twist and turn of the boys’ story, as have many people overseas.

Thais turned to social media yesterday to show their elation using the hashtag #Hooyah, a word used by the navy to build morale. Other hashtags included #Heroes and #Thankyou.

“You are our heroes!” wrote some, captioning cartoons showing the boys and their coach with dozens of rescue workers, volunteers and military personnel.

On Monday, Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha said he would host a celebratio­n for all of those involved in the multinatio­nal rescue effort.

“We will host a meal for all sides,” he said. Top Thai retailers, including Central Group and The Mall Group, also chimed in to show their support.

“We are not sure if this is a miracle, a science, or what. All the 13 Wild Boars are now out of the cave,” the navy SEAL unit wrote on its official page moments after the rescue.

The children, who were being kept in separate rooms in Chiangrai Prachanukr­oh Hospital, about 60km away from the cave, would need to spend at least a week there before being released.

The first eight to be rescued were said to be in good health, without fevers, and communicat­ing normally, according to an official in Thailand’s Public Health Ministry.

That would mean they were unlikely to be able to attend the football World Cup final on Sunday.

Fifa president Gianni Infantino had earlier invited the boys to watch the match live in Russia if they made it out of the cave in time.

The first four boys, who were rescued on Sunday, were able to see their families on Monday through a window, as doctors wanted to keep them isolated from possible outside germs, said Jetsada Chokdumron­gsuk, a permanent secretary in the Public Health Ministry.

They were also visited by, and joked with, Prayuth.

Britain’s Manchester United football club said on its official Twitter page that it was relieved to learn that the 13 were safe and extended an invitation for the group and their rescuers to visit its Old Trafford stadium.

Thailand’s prime minister said the 12 boys saved from a flooded cave were given anti-anxiety medication to help with their rescue. – Reuters, AP and dpa

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 ?? PICTURE: COURTESY OF ELON MUSK VIA AP ?? This photo tweeted by South Africa-born entreprene­ur Elon Musk shows efforts under way to rescue trapped members of a youth soccer team from a flooded cave in northern Thailand. Musk tweeted early yesterday that he had visited the cave and had left a mini-submarine there for future use.
PICTURE: COURTESY OF ELON MUSK VIA AP This photo tweeted by South Africa-born entreprene­ur Elon Musk shows efforts under way to rescue trapped members of a youth soccer team from a flooded cave in northern Thailand. Musk tweeted early yesterday that he had visited the cave and had left a mini-submarine there for future use.

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