Thailand | Tham Luang cave to be turned into museum, will showcase rescue mission
The 'living museum' will show how the operation unfolded to save 12 boys and their football coach
The 'living museum' will show how the operation unfolded to save 12 boys and their football coach
Numbering 13, including the 25-year-old assistant coach, they lost their way inside a mammoth cave system known as Tham Luang under the Doi Nang Non mountain range which straddles Chiang Rai and Mae Sai districts of the country’s Chiang Rai province.
The boys and their coach got trapped in the Tham Luang cave complex system in Chiang Rai region on June 23 following heavy seasonal rains
Eight boys and the coach are still inside the Tham Luang Nang Non cave in northern Thailand. Bringing out everyone could take up to four days, but authorities said the initial success raised hopes that could be done.
The hazardous Sunday operation to rescue the 12 boys and their coach, who have been trapped for more than two weeks, has been undertaken because of fears of rising waters.
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The army says the 12 boys and their coach will have to learn to dive or wait months for flooding to recede. They will be supplied with food that could last at least four months
12 boys, aged between 11 and 16, with their 25-year-old coach went missing on June 23 in the cave in Chiang Rai province
The Thai authorities on Tuesday are continuing their search and rescue efforts to find 12 children and an adult trapped inside a cave in northern Thailand.