CHIANG RAI It was meant to be a fun excursion after football practice, but it turned into a life-threatening, two-week ordeal for a group of youngsters trapped in a cave with rising waters and no apparent escape route.
When coach Ekkapol Chantawong led twelve members of his Wild Boar youth football team into the mouth of northern Thailands Tham Luang cave complex on 23 June, he thought theyd be no more than an hour.
We didnt have anything with us, no food, he recalled at a press conference on Wednesday where the now world famous team recounted their harrowing ordeal and miraculous escape in their own words for the first time.
One of his pupils had a tutor class to get to later that evening. And besides, Ekkapol thought, the team often explored the complex after practice and knew its meandering tunnels well.
Thailands wet season was just around the corner a period of monsoonal downpours that often floods the cave and there were already pools of water inside the mouth.
A sign outside the cave warned against entry during the monsoon. But the kids were keen to have an adventure.
We were discussing whether we wanted to explore the cave and, if so, how we would have to swim, the 25-year-old coach, a much-loved mentor to the boys, recalled. It would be wet, it would be cold. Everybody said yes.
The team, aged 11 to 16, left their bikes and football boots near the opening of the cave before one of the boys waded into the water. The rest followed.
Had the heavens not opened, the Wild Boars would have been home by mid-afternoon.
Instead, a sudden deluge forced them deep inside the cave as floodwaters rushed through the entrance and steadily rose up the walls.
That fateful decision sparked one of the most remarkable, touch-and-go cave rescue operations in history.
It brought Thai Navy SEALs and international cave diving experts together to pull off the fiendishly difficult task of first locating the missing boys and then extracting them through miles of flooded passageways, as a breathless world looked on.
One former Thai Navy SEAL, Saman Kunan, died when his air ran out during a resupply mission.
Thai cave boys speak of miracle rescue after hospital discharge
Trapped in the dank, pitch-black darkness, the boys had no idea whether anyone was even coming for them let alone that they had generated non-stop global headlines.
I was really afraid that I wouldnt be able to return home, 13-year-old Mongkol Boonpiem, recalled.
Fortunately, they had a fresh water supply.
We drank water that fell from the rocks, Pornchai Khamluang, the 16-year-old boy who first waded into the water, told reporters. It was clean and tasted like any drinking water.
As the hours turned into days, the boys did what they could to keep their spirits up coach Ekkapol, who spent some years in a local monastery as a Buddhist monk, taught them how to meditate to keep calm and preserve air.
Thai cave boys to leave hospital, speak to media
They had little concept of time but the first time they went to sleep they prayed, Ekkapol said.
Calm camaraderie saw them through but there were moments of terror.
The rising floodwaters kept pushing the group deeper into the cave. At one point they started trying to dig their way out, a futile illustration of their desperation in a cave system buried under hundreds of metres of limestone.
We used rocks to dig out the cave wall, said Phanumas Saengdee, 13.
We dug three to four meters.
Eventually, the team settled on a small muddy ledge some four kilometers inside the cave, figuring all they could do was hope someone would find them.
Thai cave rescue divers given diplomatic immunity: report
Salvation came on day nine in what to the boys seemed like the most unlikely of forms. The team heard voices but the language they were speaking was not Thai.
Two British cave diving experts, who had spent days battling the flooded passages, had finally located the stranded group.
Adul Sam-on, 14, was the only member of the Wild Boars who could speak English.
When he (the diver) emerged from the water I was shocked that he was British, he recalled. It was a miracle, I was frightened and I asked him Can I help you?’
In video of the scene that was captured by one of the divers body-cameras and later broadcast around the world, the bedraggled boys, dressed in mud-caked football kits, could be seen thanking their rescuers.
Many people are coming. Many, many people, the diver reassured the boys.
They were no longer lost or alone. The rescue mission was on.
Follow this link to join our WhatsApp group: Join Now
Be Part of Quality Journalism |
Quality journalism takes a lot of time, money and hard work to produce and despite all the hardships we still do it. Our reporters and editors are working overtime in Kashmir and beyond to cover what you care about, break big stories, and expose injustices that can change lives. Today more people are reading Kashmir Observer than ever, but only a handful are paying while advertising revenues are falling fast. |
ACT NOW |
MONTHLY | Rs 100 | |
YEARLY | Rs 1000 | |
LIFETIME | Rs 10000 | |