VIENTIANE (Reuters): A rescue team racing to save seven people trapped for days in a cave in Laos is getting closer to reaching them, the head of the operation said, after breaking through 15m of obstacles in a day.
The seven entered the cave in Laos’ central Xaisomboun province on May 20 but got trapped by a landslide triggered by heavy rain, according to a local rescue group and the state-run Lao Phattana News.
A Thai rescue team joined the operation on May 24 and reported significant progress towards reaching the chamber where the group was trapped.
“From this moment on, I believe our success is not far away,” team leader Kengkard Bongkawong said in a social media post on May 25.
The team is working alongside a local group, the Laos Rescue Volunteer for People, which said the seven people had entered the cave looking for gold. The country’s disaster agency could not be reached for comment.
Footage posted on the Facebook page of Lao Phattana News showed rescuers in helmets crawling through tight spaces under torchlight, gasping for breath, and others wading slowly through muddy, chest-high waters deep into the cave.
The team includes a diver involved in a 17-day rescue at a flooded mountain cave in Thailand in 2018 that captured global attention, when specialists from around the world, including US military personnel and Thai Navy SEALs, descended on the province of Chiang Rai to free a junior soccer team named “Wild Boars”.
Kengkard, who heads a volunteer disaster and rescue team in north-eastern Thailand, said water pumping would continue day and night, after the team broke through sand and gravel to edge closer to an underwater shaft they believe will lead them to those trapped.
He said a survey of the area above the cave found four shafts that could potentially connect to the cave system and provide an additional route for the rescue.
“We estimate that less than 20m remain before we reach the key target area,” he said. -- REUTERS
