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JavaPos.com – Rescue teams are competing to save young football teams and their coaches number 13. The young football team contains teenagers suspected to be trapped in the complex from Tham Luang Cave before it rains for two days.
As reported by the Bangkok Post on Monday (2/6), the Meteorology Department said the rain was likely to recur on Wednesday. In other words, rescue teams can get an ideal time for research today and tomorrow.
The people involved in the rescue operations started pumping the water from the flood channels that had hindered the search. So far, there has been no sign of contact or discovery of 12 footballers and a coach that they have lost since June 23, but rescue activities continue to unfold.
Pattaya beach is supposed to be 3 kilometers away. It has been reported that divers have traveled up to 600 meters up to the target area.
Divers from the Thai team and foreigners go from front to search for victims. But they can only swim slowly because the entire network of caves is still flooded and the water is full of mud. This reduces the visibility of the divers.
The King of Thailand has provided LED lights that can be used to illuminate the interior of the cave. The king urged Buddhists to study Metta Sutta to help them prepare their minds to make a strong hope for the salvation of the lost.
Last Friday, the King of Thailand led Metta Sutta's prayer for the football team at Royal Plaza Bangkok. Princess Ubolratana drew Moo Pa, or wild boar, which is named football club, with pictures of the players on her back to extend her support with the hashtag "Bring Moo Pa home".
Navy Special Forces Command Chief, Apakorn Yukongkaew, says that they will continue to go from front to side until they find children. The rescue efforts have three main components, divers trying to swim in front of a flooded cave to find the missing team.
Soldiers are looking for faults that can give the complex more roads, and engineers pump millions of gallons of water. Several teams of foreign specialists are involved.
Groups from Australia, England, China, Laos and Myanmar also participated in the operation, as did some Thai companies. The United States sent 17 Air Force rescue specialists to badist with the search, as well as additional support staff. The latest foreign aid is an Australian team that arrived Sunday at the Tham Luang cave complex.
Six members of the Australian Federal Police Intervention Task Force, with search and rescue and diving skills, arrive in Chiang Rai aboard an Australian Air Force transport aircraft C-17. Australia is working with the Thai government and the Royal Thai Army to conduct a search operation.
A member of the rescue team of China, the Green Boat Emergency Organization, thinks he can help this operation. "We have the skills to save the victims in the cave and have SRT skills, unique rope technology so we can do something for them," said James Wang.
Chinese medical experts claim that the survival of the group depends on the presence of fresh drinking water. "They can survive eight days without food," said Health Service Director Somsak Akkasilp.
Drinking water can be a problem. Missing children may be infected with dirty water or if they are in contact with animals in the cave. There has been no contact with them since they have explored the cave of Tham Luang
(ina / JPC)
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