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Brit diver tells of ‘massive relief’ at spotting boys

Brit diver tells of ‘massive relief’ at spotting boys

The British diver who found the 12 boys and their coach trapped alive in the flooded cave has described his feelings as “massive relief”, as he counted them one by one, sparking a rescue bid unprecedented in its daring and complexity.

The young “Wild Boars” and their 25-year-old football coach Ekkapol Chantawong wandered into the cave on June 23.
Sudden floodwaters forced them to retreat deep into the Tham Luang complex, sparking a desperate hunt that seized the world’s attention until they were all safely extracted on July 10, after a nail-biting three-day mission.
The success of the rescue operation has even stunned its architects – expert divers who battled muddy, rushing floodwaters for days to reach the group and eventually extract them.
Richard Stanton, one of a pair of British caving experts who found the boys, yesterday gave reporters a first-hand account of the moment he saw them emerge from behind a rock face onto a muddy ledge kilometres inside the Tham Luang cave.
“That was a massive, massive relief. Initially we weren’t certain they were all alive – as they were coming down I was counting them until I got to 13,” he said after his arrival at London’s Heathrow airport.
Grainy footage of the moment Stanton and John Volanthen discovered the dishevelled and emaciated group has become the symbol of a remarkable survival story – that has already piqued the interest of Hollywood film producers.
But the mission would last a further eight days, with the risk of extracting the weakened group through flooded, tight, twisting passageways intensified by the risk of fresh rains and falling oxygen levels inside the cave. The mission was “an order of difficulty much higher than anything that’s been accomplished anywhere around the world by any other cave diving team,” said Stanton.
A former Thai Navy diver died trying to establish an airline to the group just two days before the rescue bid was launched.
Thai authorities have only released partial information about the bold operation to free the team, heavily restricting access to the boys and their families.
But in a striking coda to an already astonishing tale, a former Thai Navy Seal told AFP the boys were “sleeping” as they were passed from divers or on pulleys as they exited the cave in stretchers.
Prime Minister Prayut Chan-o-cha had previously said the boys were given a mild tranquilliser but denied they were sedated.
Yet footage circulated by the Seal team showed boys seemingly unconscious in wetsuits and diving gear being carried over rocky passageways. While several rescuers have told AFP the boys were transported on stretchers for the whole hours-long extraction journey, all were unwilling to go on the record about the issue of sedation.
The presence of Australian anaesthetist and diver Richard “Harry” Harris points to a unique operation.
The rescue bid was also lauded for the hard, long hours and teamwork between highly skilled Thais and foreigners. 
“Despite all this amazing technology, in the end it took people working together ... for this one unifying goal,” said American caver Josh Harris, 42, who worked as liaison between the foreign divers and the Thais.
“In the end, cave rescue requires cavers and trained cave rescuers,” he said, referencing the “distraction” of the offer by US tech guru Elon Musk to evacuate the boys in a special pod.

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