Thai navy divers widening passage

02 Jul 2018 / 23:54 H.

BANGKOK: Rescuers in Thailand scrabbled to clear a constricted passageway for divers deep inside a flooded cave complex yesterday as the search for 12 boys and their football coach entered a ninth day.
The divers from a Thai navy SEAL unit were within 500m of a chamber containing an elevated rock mound, nicknamed "Pattaya Beach" by cavers, which could have provided the boys with a refuge when heavy rains flooded the cave, blocking the way out.
Progress has been slow as divers need to widen parts of a narrow 100m stretch that they were unable to pass through sharp bends without their air cylinders becoming jammed.
"Today's aim is to widen this hole," Chiang Rai governor Narongsak Osatanakorn told reporters.
"As of now we have not yet reached Pattaya Beach," he said.
The boys, aged between 11 and 16, and their 25-year-old coach disappeared on June 23 during an outing to the Tham Luang cave, which runs for 10km beneath the mountains in northern Chiang Rai province.
Aside from belongings left at the mouth of the cave and handprints on the walls, no trace of them has been found since.
National news bulletins have been dominated by updates from the mammoth search involving more than 1,000 personnel, including rescue teams from the United States, Britain and Japan.
The boys could survive for days without food, but much would depend on whether they found water clean enough to drink.
Heavy rains hampered the search operation, with divers groping their way along the cave walls, barely able to see in the muddy water, but the pumps had helped to bring down water levels in recent days.
At Mae Sai Prasitsart school, where six of the missing boys studied, special prayers were held for them during the morning assembly yesterday.
"I hope all the spirits that we cannot see please help us by releasing the 13 people who are our friends and our brothers," teacher Takkapong Thammarangsi said as he led the prayers.
Narongsak said that an operations centre has been set up in the third chamber, about 1.7km from entrance to the cave.
"Yesterday we carried in 200 air cylinders. Today we aim to have 600 air cylinders in the cave, so the team can operate and stay in the cave without coming out," he said.
Once more personnel are in place, a search will also be made of the right turn at the T-junction, he added. — Reuters

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