Houston Chronicle

Thailand cave rescue mission will go on, prime minister says

-

THAM LUANG CAVE, Thailand — The prime minister of Thailand, Prayuth Chan-ocha, offered words of encouragem­ent Friday to the families of 12 boys and their soccer coach trapped in a flooded cave complex and pledged to continue a massive search and rescue operation.

“Until they come out, the officers will never abandon them,” Prayuth told about 75 relatives during his visit, in which he also inspected the cave entrance and spoke with officials leading the closely watched search.

Later, however, officials acknowledg­ed that they faced many obstacles in finding the boys, ages 11 to 16, and their coach, 25, who have been missing since Saturday afternoon.

Despite a major mobilizati­on of soldiers, park rangers, expert divers, engineers and geologists, the operation has made little headway.

The governor of Chiang Rai province, Narongsak Osottanako­rn, who is overseeing the operation, said a few days ago that rescuers might reach the children by Friday. Instead, rising floodwater­s have further inundated the cave.

Now, he said, he could not predict when rescuers might find them, even under the best conditions.

“That is the question I cannot answer,” he said. “We don’t want to guess. But we try our best.”

The group is trapped inside Tham Luang Cave, a popular destinatio­n for explorers in northern Thailand.

The cave complex was relatively dry when the team entered six days ago. But since then, heavy rains have caused floodwater­s to rise inside, cutting off the team’s only escape route.

The governor said Friday afternoon that searchers had rappelled about 40 meters down a newly discovered chimney and into a muddy chamber. They were exploring it for an opening into the main cave system.

The soccer team is believed to have walked at least 3 miles and reached a large cavern known as Pattaya Beach.

Despite repeated efforts, highly trained cave divers have succeeded only once in making it through muddy water and narrow passageway­s to a point beyond the flooded zone, Narongsak said.

And after that success, he said, the water level rose even higher.

The government has brought in more than 40 pumps to try to reduce the volume of water. Neverthele­ss, the water level has kept rising.

Friday, he said, was the first day that the pumps were able to keep pace with the volume of water entering the cave.

A separate plan to drill a hole from the mountainto­p into the Pattaya Beach cavern also has had problems.

Workers must first analyze the rock using sophistica­ted scanning equipment typically employed in mining to determine where the roof of the cave is thinnest, said Niwat Boonnop, director of the Office of Mineral Resources for the region that includes Tham Luang.

However, locating the proper equipment and figuring out how to transport it to the rugged mountainto­p has proved difficult, as did tracking down a drilling rig and power generator that could be airlifted by helicopter.

 ?? Royal Thai Navy via AFP/Getty Images ?? A team of Royal Thai Navy SEAL divers inspects a water-filled tunnel in the Tham Luang cave during the rescue operation for the missing soccer team.
Royal Thai Navy via AFP/Getty Images A team of Royal Thai Navy SEAL divers inspects a water-filled tunnel in the Tham Luang cave during the rescue operation for the missing soccer team.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States