Thailand: six of the thirteen evacuees of the cave evacuated



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 An ambulance leaves the Tam Luang site, evacuating one of the first children to come out of the cave by divers, July 8, 2018./AFP

An ambulance leaves the Tam Luang site, evacuating one of the first children to leave of the cave by divers, July 8, 2018. / AFP

The difficult evacuation of the twelve children and their football coach stuck in a cave in Thailand for 15 days began Sunday and six of them have been successfully evacuated, the others following in a drip for family.

According to the latest report sent to AFP by the rescuers, a first group of six boys, each guided in the cave flooded by two professional divers, have already managed to get out.

They were evacuated aboard ambulances and then helicopters to Chiang Rai Hospital. AFP journalists on the scene saw the ambulances leave the site in the direction of a heliport.

"Today is the big day," Narongsak Osottanakorn, the head of the Crisis Staff, said in the morning. during a remote press conference at the cave site, from which hundreds of journalists from around the world have been mobilized for days

 A helicopter lands at the Chiang Rai military airport, transporting young evacuees from the cave, July 8, 2018./THAI NEWS PIX / AFP

A helicopter lands at the Chiang Rai military airport, carrying young evacuees from the cave, July 8, 2018. / THAI NEWS PIX / AFP

Relief warned that the children would come out "one by one", and that would take a total of "two to three days."

But the evacuation was faster than expected, in advance of more than two hours on the schedule originally indicated. And the second group could come out at night from Sunday to Monday.

– Five hours per child –

No image of the operation has emerged for the time being.

 Thailand: relief operations / AFP

Thailand: rescue operations / AFP

The wild boar football team had gone to explore the cave on June 23, after training, for some reason still unknown. They found themselves trapped by the rising waters in this cave deep in northern Thailand, on the border with Burma and Laos.

Until now, it took eleven hours for a seasoned diver to return to the children: six hours to go, five hours back thanks to the current. Several kilometers in rough casings, the route out of the cave includes difficult passages under water.

Sign of the danger of the company, a former diver of the Thai navy died Friday during a

However, a good number of children, aged 11 to 16, can not swim and none have done any diving.

 A police officer in front of the entrance of the Tham Luang Cave, July 8, 2018 in Mae Sai, where 12 children and their football coach have been stranded for several days / AFP

A police officer in front of the entrance to Tham Luang Cave, July 8, 2018 in Mae Sai, where 12 children and their football coach have been stranded for several days / AFP

"I send them my strength, I hope they will get there", reacted Nopparat Khanthavong, the main football coach of the team, interviewed by AFP. Families were not answering the phone on Sunday.

The conditions for an evacuation are considered "perfect" by the Crisis Staff, particularly with regard to the level of water in the cave.

– Return of rain –

Relief asked questions for days on the opportunity to trigger a perilous evacuation, monsoon rains expected soon could ruin the ongoing efforts to drain water from the cave.

Rescue had managed to insert a hose several kilometers to carry oxygen in the pocket where the group has taken refuge and the oxygen level stabilized in the cave.

But Saturday night and Sunday, showers fell, recalling the urgency to get the children out.

The rescuers evacuated Sunday morning the journalists around the cave.

"All those who are not involved in the operation must leave the area immediately, "police announced loudspeaker on the site, where were hundreds of journalists following this" saga "having taken an international scale.

The announcement of the police was followed by a flurry of fighting in the camp mounted by reporters, with cameras everywhere and camp beds to be at the best places to film the evacuation of children.

The head of the Crisis Staff, had warned to sell By the end of the day, the influx of media in this mountainous tropical forest area was problematic. "We have more and more media coming and going everywhere," he said. "The medical teams complained to me that this is becoming a problem," he said.

Faced with the influx of journalists, wading through the mud for days, the authorities had laid down metal barriers for keep away and allow rescuers to work without cameras around.

On Sunday, many media rushed to Chaing Rai Hospital, an hour away from the site, where the victims must be evacuated. But here too, the authorities have banned the immediate arrival of the hospital.

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