Thailand football team rescue


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DATE: Jan. 23, 2019, 11:53 p.m.

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  1. Thailand football team rescue
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  3. It's now pouring at cave complex. Slowly, he backtracked, going deeper into the cave to find the rope, before the rescue could resume.
  4. The rescue operation has become more urgent at heavy rainfall is on the way, so the flooding is set to get worse in the coming days. Up to 20 Australians were involved at the cave site. Others divers involved included Connor Roe, Josh Bratchley, and Jim Warny.
  5. Coach Ekk has been good to my boy, and now I hear how he gave them hope, and kept them calm for so many days without food. How old are the boys? Rescuers had hoped they would find safety on a ledge in an underground chamber nicknamed Pattaya Beach but they were found 400m 440 yards away having moved to higher ground to avoid the rising water. Many parents are still here waiting. Eventually, he reached Songpon Kanthawong, a 13-year-old member of the team who mentioned he was picked up after practice, and that the rest of the boys had gone exploring in the Tham Luang caves. Local schools donated money to help the parents with living costs, as many of them stopped working in order to follow the rescue attempts. My dear Ek, I would never blame you. After emerging from the cave, the boys will be taken straight into a waiting ambulance which will drive them to a nearby helipad.
  6. Thai cave boys: Rescue under way of youth football team - Nopparat Khanthavong, the founder of the Wild Boars team, explained that they are from tribes in. All 12 members of a youth soccer team and their coach were successfully from a cave in Thailand where they had been stranded for more than two weeks.
  7. The 12 boys and their football coach found alive by British divers in a Thai cave could remain underground for months as rescuers try to work out how to extricate the group from the complex underground system. Rake thin but alive, the boys aged between 11 and 16 were discovered with thailand football team rescue 25-year-old coach late on Monday, nine days. Much-needed food and medical supplies - including high-calorie gels and paracetamol - reached them on Tuesday as rescuers prepared for the possibility that they may be there for some time. The of four divers last week joined army rescue workers as they searched the pitch black of the vast Tham Luang cave network in northern. The diver then tries to explain to the team that they will have to be patient before they can be brought out of their underground refuge. Joy for families outside cave Outside the entrance a woman, presumably a female relative, clutched an iPad showing pictures of some of the boys, with relief and joy spreading over her own face as news of the discovery emerged. The news was immediately greeted by jubilant cheering from exhausted rescuers who have worked around the clock in treacherous conditions to locate and retrieve the children. The Britons reportedly descended a chimney, abseiling more than 130 feet, and sending back helmet-cam pictures. One of the cavers, Rob Harper said they were using old surveys as well as maps from recent expeditions to search the far end of the cave system, using a chamber-by-chamber check. British caver Vern Unsworth, who is familiar with the three-mile long Tham Luang cavern, also joined the search. Other rescue teams deployed drones, dogs, underwater cables and drilled through the cave walls in their efforts to locate them. When word reached the families that the 12 boys, aged between 11 and 16, and their coach, 25, had been found, the Thai government livestreamed the scenes to the nation, which has been gripped by the desperate search after they became trapped inside the six mile-long labyrinth by rising floodwaters caused by heavy monsoon rainfall. Hardest work still to come Bill Whitehouse, vice chair of the British Cave Rescue Council, said he had expected the Britons to reach the group first as they were by far the most experienced involved in the search. But he said some of the hardest work was still to come as they coordinated a dangerous rescue. Mr Whitehouse said that when the Brits arrived last week they did a couple of reconnaissance dives to assess the situation. It is difficult enough with just one person but when you have several terrified children who are not divers. Who are the British divers. Mr Stanton has been a firefighter in Coventry for quarter of a century, and Mr Volanthen is an internet engineer in Bristol. In 2010, Mr Volanthen and Mr Stanton were commended for their roles in a dramatic eight-day search for a potholer who was attempting to map tunnels in the Ardeche Gorges underground tunnel complex in France. In 2011 the pair set a world record for the longest cave dive, penetrating 9km down a system in northern Spain using specially developed equipment. But Mr Volanthen described himself as the thailand football team rescue of an adrenaline junkie. Visitors are usually only allowed up to 800 metres inside as the thailand football team rescue has a reputation for being difficult to navigate. Officials said the boys knew the site well and had visited many times before, encouraging their frantic relatives that the children were athletic and strong and capable of surviving the ordeal by drinking rainwater.

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