Experts from Thai rescue join efforts to save 7 gold prospectors trapped in Laos cave
Cave rescue experts from Thailand who aided the dramatic 2018 retrieval of a youth football team joined efforts Monday to extract seven people trapped in a flooded cave in neighboring Laos, Laotian state media said.
Seven Laotian villagers entered the cave in central Xaysomboun province, about 78 miles northeast of the capital Vientiane, on May 20, state-run Laophattana News said. They were searching for gold and were trapped inside the cave after heavy rain triggered flash flooding, blocking their exit, it added.
Authorities and villagers have been working to pump water out of the cave, but rescue teams have not been able to reach the group.
“We still do not know whether there are any signs of life or if they are still alive,” Bounkham Luanglat, president of a Laotian volunteer rescue association, told the French news agency AFP.
Metta Tham Rescue Kalasin via AP
About 100 people from Laos and Thailand have gone to the site in Long Chanh district to help in the rescue operations, the association said.
Two Thai rescue specialists and another expert from Finland who participated in the rescue of the “Wild Boars” team – who spent nearly three weeks trapped by flash floods in northern Thailand’s Tham Luang cave complex in 2018 – arrived at the Laos cave on Monday, Laophattana News said.
All 12 boys and their football coach were rescued from the cave complex in 2018. The captain of the team died by suicide at age 17 while at school in the U.K in 2023.
The Laotian rescue group said in a letter dated Saturday that it was appealing to charities in Thailand for specialist personnel and equipment, including water pumps, generators and thermal imaging devices, to help locate and extract the seven trapped people.
The group described the situation as a humanitarian emergency and urged Thai partners to contribute, as rescuers were working in difficult flood conditions.
“The mission is tough. Because of rain, when we went down [into the cave] we had to move out as the water level was increasing,” Thai rescuer Chakkit Taengtan said in a video posted to his Facebook page on Sunday.
The cave system, located in a remote area, extends deep underground, with multiple levels and some passages reaching more than 110 yards from the entrance, the Laotian rescue group said.
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