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The Independent UK
The Independent UK
World
Chiara Giordano

Thai cave boys thank rescuers as they speak on video in hospital for the first time

Twelve Thai boys rescued from a flooded cave in Thailand with their football coach have thanked their rescuers while speaking out on video from their hospital beds for the first time.

In the footage, the boys appear well, sitting up in their hospital beds wearing surgical masks and thanking their rescuers as they prepare to be reunited with their families within days.

"I am in good health now," said one of the boys, a 14 year old nicknamed Note. "Thanks for saving me."

Thailand’s public health minister Piyasakol Sakolsattayatorn said the health of all 13 had improved, including those who had pneumonia, and that they would be able to go home on Thursday.

The boys, aged 11 to 16, and their 25-year-old coach had gone into the Tham Luang cave, near the border with Myanmar, intending to explore for an hour after football practice on June 23 but ended up getting trapped after a downpour flooded their exit route.

Two volunteer British divers found them on July 2, squatting on a mound in a flooded chamber several kilometres inside the complex.

John Volanthen and Rick Stanton told the BBC they “smelt the children before we saw or heard them”.

Thai public health minister Dr PiyasakolSakolsattayatorn, centre, updates the world on the boys' condition (AP/Vincent Thian)

"Wherever there is air space we surface, we shout, we smell," Mr Volanthen told the BBC. “It's a standard procedure for such rescue operations.”

All 13 were brought to safety over the course of a three-day rescue mission, organised by Thai navy Seals and an international team of cave-diving experts.

Doctors say the group, who survived by drinking water from moisture dripping from the cave walls, will still need to be closely monitored for physical and psychological effects of their ordeal after they leave hospital.

Some of the group lost as much as 11lbs but have since regained some of the weight, and their appetites, in hospital, Mr Piyasakol said.

The boys have asked for crispy pork rice and barbecue rice, while others have said they are craving sushi.

But while the group is good health, they still face challenges.

One concern has been how they will deal with the fame, given the huge attention, both from within Thailand and beyond.

The story is already set for a retelling by Hollywood, with two production companies looking to put together films about the boys and their rescue.

The cave is also expected to become a museum, to show how the operation unfolded.

"We need to prepare both the children and their families for the attention they will receive when they come out," Mr Piyasakol said.

He warned relatives of the boys to resist giving interviews to media over fears they could have a negative impact on their mental health.

"Everyone has worked well together to bring the children out,” Mr Piyasakol said. “We worked well together then and we should work well together now so the children can recover physically and mentally as they grow up.”

Reuters contributed to this report

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