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Home / World

Thai cave rescue: Former Navy SEAL dies from lack of oxygen

By Emma Reynolds
news.com.au·
6 Jul, 2018 02:59 AM7 mins to read

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The boys smile as Thai Navy SEAL medic help injured children inside athe cave in Mae Sai. Photo / AP

The boys smile as Thai Navy SEAL medic help injured children inside athe cave in Mae Sai. Photo / AP

Thai authorities say a former navy SEAL working to rescue 12 boys trapped in a cave has died from lack of oxygen.

SEAL commander Arpakorn Yookongkaew told a news conference today the rescuer was working in a volunteer capacity and died during an overnight mission in which he was placing oxygen canisters.

The name of diver has been revealed as Samarn Kunan, 38.

He died due to lack of air when attempting to return to a command centre.

Kunan's body is being sent back to his hometown in Roi Et, Bangkok.

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A BATTLE AGAINST TIME

Rescuers are working day and night to save the boys before it's too late, but some may be too weak to complete the terrifying mission.

Two of the boys and their football coach are suffering from exhaustion through malnutrition, which could make it almost impossible for them to attempt the perilous journey, a navy source told CNN.

The lack of oxygen and the approaching torrential rains also threaten to derail the risky plan.

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They are trapped three kilometres into a system of linked chambers in Mae Sai, northern Thailand, as their frightened families wait at the cave entrance. It is believed they may have entered as part of an initiation rite, although two mothers came forward to say they did not blame coach Ekkapol Chantawong for their boys' desperate circumstances.

The 25-year-old coach and former monk is struggling after selflessly sacrificing his share of food, reported the ABC. But it is still possible he could be charged over the crisis.

First, the global rescue operation urgently needs to get the boys out.

Skilled cave divers are painstakingly teaching them to swim in preparation for a perilous escape, which involves pairing them with trained frogmen and leading them to safety through pitch-black water and narrow passageways.

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It had been hoped the rescue would begin on Thursday, but the ambitious plan remains on hold as fears grow for the group.

VOLUNTEERS' DANGEROUS WATER ERROR

Out in the open air, teams from across the world are working frantically with Thai authorities to overcome potentially deadly challenges and save the boys' lives.

Time is not on their side, with torrential monsoon rains forecast to hit Chiang Rai province this weekend, which could cut off the boys from the outside world for months.

Volunteers have been helping Thai Navy SEALs to pump water out of the caves, but some unregistered helpers made the situation worse by accidentally pumping water back into the cave, officials told the Bangkok Post.

Thai rescue workers practise medical training on an entrance of Tham Luang Nang Non cave. Photo / Getty Images
Thai rescue workers practise medical training on an entrance of Tham Luang Nang Non cave. Photo / Getty Images
How the rescue operation will unfold.
How the rescue operation will unfold.

Operation commander Narongsak Osotthanakorn said the volunteers directed the flow of extracted water into the ground, creating a stream that fed back into Tham Luang cave.

"We are racing against water," said Mr Narongsak, former governor of Chiang Rai province. "Water is flowing into the cave although we have plugged its channels."

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Belgian cave diver Ben Reymenants, who owns a business in Phuket, was reportedly exploring a new, wider channel with air pockets that could offer a safer route out for the boys.

If one of them was to panic while following a rope through water like "black coffee", they could kill themselves or their rescuers.

POTENTIALLY FATAL DELAY

The distraught families of the young boys are waiting and praying at the cave mouth for news of their children. The youngsters, aged 11 to 16, were believed dead after they went missing on June 23. They were finally found alive almost ten days later by divers on Monday, starving yet overjoyed to be discovered.

But their relatives have learnt the rescue operation could take weeks or even months if the storms arrive, and there is no easy way to extract the trapped boys from their subterranean prison.

Royal Thai Navy SEALs, Australian Federal Police divers and rescuers from countries including the UK, US and China have converged on the scene to help — but they are concerned at the slowness of communication.

An image of the boys taken when they were first discovered by divers. Photo / AP
An image of the boys taken when they were first discovered by divers. Photo / AP
A Thai Navy SEAL medic helps an injured child inside a cave in Mae Sai, northern Thailand. Photo / AP
A Thai Navy SEAL medic helps an injured child inside a cave in Mae Sai, northern Thailand. Photo / AP

It takes even experienced divers six to seven hours to complete the round-trip from forward command in the third cave chamber to the boys huddled on a ledge deep inside the complex at Noem Nom Sao. This could mean a fatal delay if anything was to go wrong during the audacious rescue plan.

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Engineers are working to install a cable to allow the children to speak to rescuers and their families to improve their morale. Media at the scene reported seeing officials taking old-fashioned military communication devices into the cave system, but one phone reportedly fell into the water and had to be replaced.

Rescuers have also been transporting food, supplies and first aid into the caves, along with diving equipment to be used by the boys and oxygen "stage" tanks that will be set up every 25 to 50 metres along their route for extra air.

The boys have been practising wearing scuba masks, and will be kitted out with wetsuits, aqua boots and a helmet as they attempt to escape.

International rescuers team prepare to enter the cave where a young football team and their coach are trapped. Photo / AP
International rescuers team prepare to enter the cave where a young football team and their coach are trapped. Photo / AP

They will share oxygen from a navy rescue diver's air supply as they follow a guide rope through the murky water.

The divers will have to remove their scuba kits to squeeze through certain narrow points along the route, with volunteers holding the guideline submerged up to ten metres at various points in the freezing, muddy water.

A happy family member shows the latest pictures of the missing boys taken by rescue divers. Photo / AP
A happy family member shows the latest pictures of the missing boys taken by rescue divers. Photo / AP

British cave expert Vern Unsworth, who lives in Thailand, said conditions were getting worse and there was now a narrow window in which the group could escape.

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"I think we'll know in the next 24 hours … We'll keep our fingers crossed, everybody needs to pray and hope for a good outcome," Mr Unsworth told the BBC.

HIDDEN PASSAGE OR A DEATH-DEFYING JOURNEY

Around 30 teams of jungle trekking rescuers were scouring above ground for a possible "secret passage" to safety, after the boys told divers they heard dogs barking, a rooster crowing and children playing.

If they weren't hallucinating, this may mean the trapped boys are close to a shaft that rescuers could climb down for a far easier evacuation method.

Thai police stand in front of the entrance to the cave complex. Photo / AP
Thai police stand in front of the entrance to the cave complex. Photo / AP

The current plan involves an arduous, four-hour journey for the young boys, and could last for two days of continuous individual trips.

A certified cave diver from the US said the boys would have to undergo "intensive training" if they were to stand any chance of exiting the cave alive. "Normal cave diving requires skills that go beyond what 99 per cent of the world's divers have ever seen, which is why it is so very hard to become certified to dive in caves," John Adsit wrote in an educational journal.

"The greatest enemy to a diver is panic. Students who are accustomed to the normal mishaps of swimming, like accidentally getting water in the mouth or eyes, will usually have no trouble, but for people with little swimming experience, such a minor event can lead to irrational panic.

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"Most of the Thai team members are nonswimmers, and the culture there has a common belief that swimming is extremely dangerous. That starts any training in a serious deficit."

Classmates of the boys joined their families in the forest at the entrance to the cave, the BBC reported, where they sang: "Believe in God. Only belief can move a mountain."

Soldiers were controlling the crowds as heavy machinery was brought to the cave entrance and medics rehearsed carrying empty stretchers to ambulances for when the boys emerge.

It is suspected that the group entered the cave to write their names on the wall as part of an initiation ritual. But Thai police refused to comment on whether the 25-year-old coach should be charged for leading the children into the cave.

Video shot by divers showed the boys looking thin but apparently in good spirits, asking what day it was and whether they could have something to eat.

Chilean miner Mario Sepulveda, who was trapped underground for 69 days in 2010, sent a heartfelt video message to the boys, telling them they should not be afraid to cry.

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They will need to show even more bravery in the days to come.

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