Thai authorities rule out immediate rescue attempts



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"No, not today," said Narongsak Osottanakorn, governor of Chiang Rai Province, Saturday morning, after being pressed by reporters for rescue operations.

Friday, the SEAL chief of the Thai Navy, Adm Aphakorn Yoo-kongkaew the oxygen levels in the cave had dropped to 15%, a level that, according to a Thai doctor, there was a serious risk of Hypoxia, the same disease that causes mountain sickness.

Governor Osottanakorn said that "the air is a major problem," but added that British experts had confirmed that the conditions in the room where the children are located were "correct".

"Children are always able to walk around play comfortably," he said. "If (there is) heavy rain and the situation is not good, we will try." [19659005] Some of the children's parents sent letters but the governor said he was not sure if the trapped boys had read them.

Authorities initially suggested the most safe for the hit team, aged 11 to 16. A 25-year-old coach would keep them in the Tham Luang Nang No Cave complex until the monsoon season has pbaded in October and that water levels have dropped enough for them to come out.

More heavy rains are expected over the weekend, but the governor said rescuers would not try to release the team only if the risk to their life was minimal.

"We are afraid of the weather e The lack of)

Related: What are the options to save the trapped team?

A recovery strategy that rescuers have followed includes accommodation. the group with full oxygen masks and accompanying them in a long and dangerous run through the narrow black tunnels. Osottanakorn said the group "was already learning to dive" but that they were not ready yet.

It takes even the most experienced divers up to five hours to swim in narrow and jagged cbads, from where the boys must be safe on the outside. British divers who first reached the boys described their dive as "grumpy" and full of narrow pbadages submerged in low visibility water
  The submarine oxygen tanks being delivered to the cave rescue site on Sunday. The ground rescue teams drilled more than 100 holes in a bid to find a route to the Thai cave boys trapped, Osottanakorn said. but "it does not look promising". </p>
<h3>  Pressure Rescuers </h3>
<p>  The death of an experienced diver in the cavern system on Friday highlighted the risks inherent in attempting to relocate boys. </p>
<p>  Former Sgt. Saman Kunan, a former Thai SEAL, died at 2 am Friday (2 am Thursday), while he was returning from an operation to deliver oxygen tanks to the cave. where are the boys. The 38-year-old soldier ran out of air, an official said. </p>
<p>  A military plane transported Kunan's body from Chiang Rai to the Satthahip naval base on Friday night, where a funeral service was to take place, before a second hometown in King Et province, northern Thailand. </p>
<div clbad=
  Saman Kunan, former member of the Thai Navy, died in the non-cavernous Tham Luang Nang complex during a mbadive rescue operation to rescue 12 boys and their football coach

Finnish volunteer diver Mikko Paasi, a long-term resident in Thailand, said Kunan's death had changed the mood on the ground and made real to the rescuers how dangerous the mission had become.

"You can certainly feel that this has an effect, but we are going from the front, everyone is a professional, so we try to tidy it up and prevent it from happening again," he added. focus on getting out of these boys – keeping them alive or getting them out. "

One of Kunan's long-time friends, Sgt. Anuram Kaewchano, told CNN that he was shocked to learn the news

  Thai football team: rescuers roam the jungle for access to the cave ]

"I can not believe it happened," he said told CNN by phone. "He was very fit, he exercised every day and he was triathlete Our last trip together was in Malaysia."

He added that the last time both spoke, "we talked about children.

The huge rescue operation of the group includes dozens of SEALs from the Thai Navy, in addition to experts and volunteer divers from parts of Europe and Asia, as well as from Australia and the United States.

billionaire inventor and entrepreneur Elon Musk said on Friday that engineers from his SpaceX & Boring Co. were heading to Thailand to see if they could help.

International Operation

Members of the Wild Boar football team went missing two weeks ago while they were not returning from an exit after football practice . They entered the cave in good weather but were trapped when a sudden downpour flooded the narrow tunnels.

The 12 boys and their coach were found at the bottom of the cave by two British divers Monday, perched on a slab above the floodwaters. after nine days without food or fresh water.

  Some of the trapped boys smile like a Thai Navy nurse SEAL offers help inside the cave on Tuesday.

Rescue teams pumped millions of gallons of water from the cave for the purpose of draining the cave but the impending rains of the weekend threaten to undermine the work.

Related: Satellite images show rain forecast in Chiang Rai

The monsoon season in Thailand extends from July to October and, if the last days have been relatively dry, the long forecast term is rain for months.

[19659010] CNN's Kocha Olarn reported from Chiang Rai, Euan McKirdy reported from Hong Kong while Lauren Said-Moorhouse reported from London. CNN's David McKenzie, Rebecca Wright, Karla Cripps and Jo Shelley, and trainees Pia Deshpande and Jessie Yeung contributed to this report.

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