Rain delays search for Thai football team trapped in flooded cave

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Thai soldiers relay electric cable deep into the Tham Luang cave at the Khun Nam Nang Non Forest Park in Chiang Rai on June 26, 2018 during a rescue operation for a missing children’s football team and their coach. (AFP PHOTO / LILLIAN SUWANRUMPHA)

It’s a long and tortuous wait for the parents and relatives of 12 boys trapped inside a cave in Thailand. Circumstances in the area are diminishing hope the group will be found alive.

CGTN’s Tony Cheng reports.

Kham Chantawong is the aunt of Aek, the 25-year-old coach who took the boys into the cave. She said he’d only been inside once in the last few years, but she was sure he would do anything to protect the boys.

Family members and relatives pray as they keep vigil near the Tham Luang cave in Khun Nam Nang Non Forest Park in Chiang Rai on June 26, 2018 while rescue personnel conduct operation for a missing children’s football team and their coach. (AFP PHOTO / Lillian SUWANRUMPHA)

“He took very good care of the kids. They all got on very well together. The children never fought or even cursed at each other,” she said.

The rescue site has been swarming with people. The plight of the 13 has attracted huge attention in Thailand and around the world, but the conditions aren’t helping the cause.

A relative shows the photograph of missing Adorn Sanorn, 14, as family members keep vigil near Tham Luang cave at the Khun Nam Nang Non Forest Park in Chiang Rai on June 26, 2018 while rescue personnel conduct operation for a missing children’s football team and their coach. (AFP PHOTO / Lillian SUWANRUMPHA)

An enormous number of people have been drafted into the main command and control center. Army, military and civilian search and rescue teams have all joined forces.

Rain has been coming down heavily in the region, and the whole area is swathed in mud. The water level outside the caves has risen fast, making circumstances difficult and dangerous.

More search and rescue teams went into the caves on Tuesday, fully equipped to dive in what is now deep water. But apart from an abandoned phone and pair of shoes, there have been no signs of life.

A pair of soccer shoes are left next to bicycles from a group of missing boys at the entrance of a deep cave in Chiang Rai, northern Thailand, Monday, June 25, 2018. (Thai News Pix via AP)

British cave expert Vern Unsworth knows the cave well, and has been advising the rescue teams. He’s already been inside twice.

“If they’re in the right place, they can survive for 5-6 days. But the water now, the floodwater, is getting higher and higher, so there will be a point in time where even this cave here, the entrance will close,” Unsworth said.

Thai rescue personnel carry oxygen tanks inside Tham Luang cave to conduct operations to find the missing members of the children’s football team along with their coach at the cave in Khun Nam Nang Non Forest Park in Chiang Rai on June 26, 2018. (AFP PHOTO / THAI NEWS PIX / Krit Phromsakla Na SAKOLNAKORN)

There’s been a desperate attempt further down the mountain to pump water out of a lake. This could help drain the caves of water. But in the heavy rain, it’s had little impact. As day four drew to a close, the army sent in an extra thousand troops to support the rescue efforts.