The twelve boys and their football coach trapped in a pitch-black cave in Thailand anxiously awaited rescue for nine days. Now their rescuers have arrived, but their ordeal is far from over.
The boys are between 1.2 miles and 2.5 miles into the flooded cave and around half-a-mile below the surface.
It leaves a conundrum for rescuers. Should they stay where they are and wait for the end of the rainy season in October – hoping their chamber does not fill to the top with water? Or should they risk trying to guide the boys underwater through the narrow and winding cave network to the outside?
Here, we examine the issues rescuers face if they try to get them out via the underwater route.
What are the physical dangers?
“None of these boys know how to swim, we’re going to have to treat them from scratch,” Butch Hendrick, a veteran rescue diver and president of Lifeguard Systems in the US, told The Independent.
“We’re going to have to get them used to being in the water. We’ve got to teach them how to use a full face mask. They need to know how to clear it if it does get a little water in it they have to know how to get that water out – the same thing we teach people all over the world.”
The mask will be needed not only to help them breathe, but to protect them from the polluted water in which they will swim, he said.
“The possibility is the water around them is contaminated or polluted,” Mr Hendrick said. “For 10 days there’s been 13 people who have been defecating in that area. We don’t know what went into the cave in terms of contamination and pollution, but we do know they’ve been polluting the area while they’ve been there.”
They would need exposure suits to protect them from this danger as well as from hypothermia brought on by the icy water, he said.
But there could be problems getting hold of such equipment. “Those suits have got to be made special for these boys – they’re not sitting on a shelf somewhere – they’re child sizes,” he said. Manufacturers simply do not cater for child divers, he said.
What are the psychological challenges?
One of the greatest risks is that the children will panic and drown. Having no visibility was likely to make this worse, he said.
“Not only have you got to teach them them how to breath under water and use a full face mask you’ve got to them to understand that they’re not going to see anything.
“A severe lack of visibility for a long period of time means they could end up becoming quite nervous. The brain gets confused when it can’t see. They could panic.”
To help with this, the boys are going to have to get to know their rescuers.
“Each of these boys have got to have a solid bonding with the individual who’s going to take them out,” Mr Hendrick said. “That’s going to take a little it of time for the boy and rescuer to actually reach a point where the boy can trust him. That emotional bonding is imperative to the success of each of these boys coming out.”
Thailand cave rescue: the story so far
1/18
Rescue teams assemble at the entrance to the Tham Luang cave complex where a group of 12 boys and their football coach have been missing since 23 June
AP
2/18
Buddhist monk Kruba Boonchum visits the site to perform religious rituals
Getty Images
3/18
Thai Prime Minister Prayut Chan-o-cha visits the site
REUTERS
4/18
A rescue team stands in the entrance to the cave
AP
5/18
British cave-divers (from left to right) Richard William Stanton, Robert Charles Harper and John Volanthen join the rescue effort
AFP/Getty Images
6/18
Divers prepare for the rescue mission
EPA
7/18
A rescuer enters the cave
AP
8/18
The 12 boys and their coach are from an under-16 football team, they went missing on 23 June and were found on 2 July following work by an international rescue team. The rescue is still ongoing, with it being unknown how long it will be before the boys emerge
REUTERS
9/18
A relative shows a picture of the boys after they were found on 2 July
AFP/Getty Images
10/18
The father of one of the missing boys thanks soldiers after the boys are found
AFP/Getty Images
11/18
Relatives celebrate after they hear that the boys have been found
AFP/Getty Images
12/18
Relatives pray after they hear that the boys have been found
Getty Images
13/18
Relatives celebrate after they hear that the boys have been found
AFP/Getty Images
14/18
General Bancha Duriyaphan announces the news to the press
Getty Images
15/18
With the rescue mission still ongoing, Thai soldiers carry equipment into the cave
EPA
16/18
With the rescue mission still ongoing, Thai soldiers carry equipment into the cave
EPA
17/18
Water is being pumped out of the flooded cave complex in an effort to make the rescue easier
Getty Images
18/18
Rescue workers prepare oxygen tanks for the rescue mission. It is thought that the boys may have to be taught how to dive in order to escape the cave.
EPA
1/18
Rescue teams assemble at the entrance to the Tham Luang cave complex where a group of 12 boys and their football coach have been missing since 23 June
AP
2/18
Buddhist monk Kruba Boonchum visits the site to perform religious rituals
Getty Images
3/18
Thai Prime Minister Prayut Chan-o-cha visits the site
REUTERS
4/18
A rescue team stands in the entrance to the cave
AP
5/18
British cave-divers (from left to right) Richard William Stanton, Robert Charles Harper and John Volanthen join the rescue effort
AFP/Getty Images
6/18
Divers prepare for the rescue mission
EPA
7/18
A rescuer enters the cave
AP
8/18
The 12 boys and their coach are from an under-16 football team, they went missing on 23 June and were found on 2 July following work by an international rescue team. The rescue is still ongoing, with it being unknown how long it will be before the boys emerge
REUTERS
9/18
A relative shows a picture of the boys after they were found on 2 July
AFP/Getty Images
10/18
The father of one of the missing boys thanks soldiers after the boys are found
AFP/Getty Images
11/18
Relatives celebrate after they hear that the boys have been found
AFP/Getty Images
12/18
Relatives pray after they hear that the boys have been found
Getty Images
13/18
Relatives celebrate after they hear that the boys have been found
AFP/Getty Images
14/18
General Bancha Duriyaphan announces the news to the press
Getty Images
15/18
With the rescue mission still ongoing, Thai soldiers carry equipment into the cave
EPA
16/18
With the rescue mission still ongoing, Thai soldiers carry equipment into the cave
EPA
17/18
Water is being pumped out of the flooded cave complex in an effort to make the rescue easier
Getty Images
18/18
Rescue workers prepare oxygen tanks for the rescue mission. It is thought that the boys may have to be taught how to dive in order to escape the cave.
EPA
He added: “If they don’t trust him, they’re going to be trying to do their own thing all the time.”
This posed a danger to the rescuers, not just the children, he said. ”As well as the rescuer cannot be in a situation where they are being fought.”
He added: “There’s a major amount of danger is trying to get them out – thats why the training process the preparation in getting them ready to go. You can’t just put a mask on them and say here we go. One of the things I would be saying if I was there with them is – this is the next step in an incredible adventure they they have taken. They’re already survived 10 days before we found them on their own.
“The ability to take a child who can’t swim and teach him how to breath underwater is going to be a difficult task – but not an impossible task.”
