Thai rescuers vowed to take a “no risk” approach to freeing 12 boys and their football coach from a flooded cave, as fresh video emerged yesterday showing the team in good spirits following their astonishing discovery nine days after going missing.
Freeing the boys from the still-submerged cave complex is expected to be a protracted process, fraught with challenges for a group who are not divers and some of whom are believed to be unable to swim.
With the country engrossed in the rescue mission, authorities insist they will only move the boys once their safety can be guaranteed, even though monsoon rains are predicted to soon resume.
“We have to be 100% confident that there is no risk to the boys before we evacuate,” Narongsak Osottanakorn, Chiang Rai provincial governor, told reporters yesterday.
“We will take care of them like they are our own children,” he said.
The group are being taught how to use diving masks and breathing apparatus, he added, but from the safety of the muddy bank which for now remains their sanctuary.
Authorities are also pumping out water round-the-clock aware of the bad weather forecast in the days ahead, removing around 1cm each hour in a 
massive draining operation.
“We want to evacuate all 13 people as soon as possible but I don’t want to specify day and date,” Thailand’s junta leader Prayut Chan-O-Cha said later.
In a heartening message to families waiting outside the cave, footage was released by the Thai Navy SEALS featuring 11 of the 12-strong team.
Each made a traditional Thai greeting gesture to the camera before introducing themselves by their nickname and saying “I’m in good health”.
Several of the boys in the frame are wearing protective foil blankets and are accompanied by a smiling diver in a wetsuit.
Also seen is the 25-year-old coach, who went with the boys to explore the cave on June 23 after football training, something the team often did after practice.
The group then became trapped by rising flood waters.
A one-minute video clip ends on a jovial note, with one of the 12 young footballers saying he was forgotten in the round of introductions, sparking laughter.
The images have delighted a Thai nation that has held its breath for a successful outcome to a challenging rescue kilometres inside one of the country’s longest caves.
In the video the boys, who have spent 11 nights underground, appear relaxed and much more alert than when they were when British divers found them late Monday huddling on a muddy ledge above surging underground 
waters.
Outside the cave the mother of one of the boys teared up as she watched the clip on a television screen, saying she was “glad” for a glimpse of her son.
“He is thinner” she said as she ran her finger over his image – a sign of the heartache the saga has brought to relatives of the trapped 13.
As evening fell on the non-stop rescue operation, a prominent monk arrived at the cave and was allowed into the entrance.
Trailed by parents and relatives, he prayed for the kids to be delivered from their ordeal soon.
Several Navy SEAL divers have deployed along with medics vowing to stay with the group while the challenging process of evacuating the “Wild Boar” team begins.
Thai authorities say the focus is now building up the boys’ physical and mental strength after an ordeal that has left them emaciated.
Next they have three main options: diving out of the cave system, exiting through another hole if one can be found – or drilled – or waiting out the rainy season underground.
Experts say diving out is laden with risk – more so as the boys have never dived before and some may not be able to swim, making a long underwater 
escape perilous.
Areas of the cave remain submerged and navigating claustrophobic passages in murky rushing waters risks panic, even if the boys have ample equipment, expert support and a crash-course in how to dive.
“This requires them to be psychologically able to cope with being underwater... and the dives being not too long or difficult,” Alan Warild, an expert from the NSW Cave Rescue Squad in 
Australia, said.
The last option of waiting for the monsoon to abate, could be protracted as the monsoon 
begins to bite.
However, officials say they have stored food, medicine and equipment to last for up to four months at an underground base.


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