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Thai cave boys speak about their ordeal for first time after leaving hospital

Source: News Corp Australia Network:
July 18, 2018 at 09:14
THE 12 Thai boys who were trapped in a cave for two weeks have spoken to media about their extraordinary ordeal.

ONE of the young Thai soccer players has described to a media conference in Thailand the dramatic moment the team heard their rescuers coming.

Adun Samon told his teammates to be quiet when he heard the voices.

“I started to listen and it became reality, the (talking). I asked Mig to go down, because Mig was holding the torch.

“Quickly, go down to have a look, otherwise they might go past us.”

All 12 players and their coach have been under close supervision at Chiang Rai Prachanukroh hospital, near the border with Myanmar, since they were rescued from the cave on July 10.

They are answering questions submitted in advance and screened by psychologists to ensure their wellbeing, a Thai government spokesman said.


THE RESCUE

Adun said the teammate hesitated, so he went and got the torch.

“I greeted them, I said ‘hello’. I heard ‘hello’. Someone was raising their head above the water and said, ‘Hello’.

“I went in there and the noise asked, ‘Hello, is anyone there?’

“When they came out of the water, I was surprised. I didn’t know what to talk to them.

“I said ‘Hello’, or something like that.

“When they said ‘hello’ to me, I said ‘hello’ back. It was so magnificent. I didn’t know questions to ask. It took me a while before I could answer them, when they asked me how I was. I answered them, I was so surprised. The person asked me how many of us there were. I said ‘13’. ... They answered, ‘Brilliant and the person was very happy knowing there was 13 of us.”
 

Some of the 12 Thai boys, rescued from a flooded cave after being trapped for more than a fortnight, arrive to attend a press conference in Chiang Rai.
Some of the 12 Thai boys, rescued from a flooded cave after being trapped for more than a fortnight, arrive to attend a press conference in Chiang Rai.Source:AFP


 

The young footballers and their coach appeared healthy when they appeared before the media for the first time on July 18.
The young footballers and their coach appeared healthy when they appeared before the media for the first time on July 18.Source:AFP


Another boy said they struggled to understand the dive team because their English was not good.

“Everyone was so happy when they heard the noise of the divers. ... It was the first noise from outside in 10 days. They asked me to go up, ... go higher. They asked me how many days have we been in here and I answered him. ... I said ‘10 days’.

“At that time my brain wasn’t working. In my brain ... there was no maths, no arithmetic, no English. At that time, I was so hungry as well.”
 

The boys in their hospital beds. They now have all been released.
The boys in their hospital beds. They now have all been released.Source:Supplied


FOOD, THE RECOVERY AND THE WORLD CUP

To applause from a crowd watching, a team member told how all he wanted to do was “eat, eat, eat” and how he watched the final of the football World Cup.

“Among us only two persons were supporting Croatia, the rest were supporting France. The team was very happy, because they were able to watch the final game of the World Cup.”

The boys walked into the conference in their Wild Boars football uniforms.

They gestured thanks to the crowd who cheered them as they walked into the hall where the conference was held.

They kicked a football around on a mock soccer field with teammates who weren’t in the cave, before taking questions.

The first question was about the last night the boys spent in hospital.

The speaker who is answering on the boys behalf said a doctor found the boys “well spirited” despite everything they had been through.

“They are very strong inside. This is psychological work, done by their psychiatrists, as well as the psychologists. You can see the love and the care transmitted to them by the health professionals.”

Each one had been found to have “very good physical health”.

“Blood samples have been tested, physical examination has been done and just now we were able to witness the strength and both physical strength, as well as the mental strength of the team members of the Wild Boar team are in a very top position.”

He said their strength began to return as they ate more meals and joked about eating a Thai delicacy, a sausage found in the northern part of Thailand.

A psychologist found they were “well adjusted socially”.

Officials said after the media conference they will return to their families. They have all been given the all-clear to leave hospital.
 



GETTING TRAPPED

The coach, Ake, 25, said everyone agreed to go into the cave.

“We went in there and saw a couple of pools of water. This time we went further than that. I said, “Do we want to go?”

One of the boys said ‘within one hour we have to come back, we have to come out before 5pm, because someone has to get home.”

When they went to leave, they realised they were trapped. Talk turned to who was the strongest swimmer so they could test how deep the water was.

they then found more water and it confused them - they weren’t sure if they were lost or not. What was happening though was the water had risen quickly and it was getting dark.

“We were determined to find a way out. We tried to calm down. I told everyone to fight on, to have a good spirit, don’t give up.”

They devised a plan to “dig a passageway” for the water to flow through - but it didn’t recede at all.

“Everyone decided, ‘OK, let’s go and find a place to sleep, don’t worry, maybe it was just because the water rose and then it would recede later.”

We had determined that we were going to spend the night there. We did not prepare any bedding materials at all.”

The initial plan was to remain near the water and to “pray to the gods”, Ake said.

“At this time we were not afraid. I thought on the next day the water would recede and then someone would come and find us.”
 

The boys arrived at the media conference to cheers from a crowd outside.
The boys arrived at the media conference to cheers from a crowd outside.Source:AFP


THE BIG WAIT

The hunger didn’t really begin until the second day. By then, they were feeling weak.

They tried to conserve energy, and not use the torch much as they were scared it would run out of batteries.

The youngest team member told the media conference he felt “dizzy and weak” and tried to overcome this by not thinking about food.

Asked what he was thinking of, he said: “Fried rice and the dipping sauce of the north.”

He tried to drink water as much as possible. Much of the days were spent digging holes with stone pieces. for something to do.

They believed there was a way at the end of the cave, but knew it was a long way away.

“We have only one chance, to go to the other end of the cave. My opinion was - if we are not able it find that way out, then we will die in the middle. So, we came back. We had two choices... First, to go this way and the second is to wait there and let other people come to discover us. Water started to flow into our direction. After a while, within one hour, the water started to rise.”


LESSONS LEARNED, HOPES FOR THE FUTURE

Coach Ake said he would not go back to he cave without a guide. He vowed to be more careful in future with any sort of activity. One boy said he promised to be “a good person, a good citizen”, while another said he would not live callously.

“From now on I will live my life carefully.”

Several of the boys said they wanted to be navy seals - an answer that drew applause from the crowd.

Others wanted to be professional footballers.

The boys all had the same answer when they were asked what they would say to their parents.

“I want to say sorry,” one boy said, as the others agreed. Some of the boys hadn’t even told their parents where they were going, and one told his parents the wrong cave.

ONLY INTERVIEW

Chiang Rai’s provincial governor Prachon Pratsukan added that it would be their “only official media interview”, saying that there would “be no more speaking with the press after this”.

The Wild Boars soccer team, made up of 12 children aged 11-16, and their coach Ekkapol Chantawong, were carried to safety in a high-risk rescue mission from the depths of the Tham Luang cave complex in northern Thailand over several days last week.

Their heroic rescuers included the Thai Navy SEALs and foreign divers, including Australians, who risked their own lives in “completely uncharted, unprecedented territory” while racing against depleting oxygen and monsoonal storms, to bring the boys home.

Their appearance before the word’s media came after a heartwarming gesture from the hospital where they have been recovering.
 

The rescued soccer team members posing with a sketch of the Thai Navy SEAL diver who died while trying to rescue them.
The rescued soccer team members posing with a sketch of the Thai Navy SEAL diver who died while trying to rescue them.Source:AP


They held up a picture of the former Thai Navy SEAL diver Saman Kunan, 38, who died while he was sending them essential supplies in the sprawling underwater cave. His death was the only one during the rescue effort that lasted two weeks and involved hundreds of people.

In a further mark of respect the boys’ will enter the monkhood to pay tribute to Mr Saman.

In Theravada Buddhist practice, ordaining to be a monk at a temple and donating the merit gained is one of the greatest honours that a person can give to another. When the boys are ordained, they will be doing so in honour of Mr Saman, and therefore donating the merit of the exercise to his memory.

andrew.koubaridis@news.com.au

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