Rescuers hack through rock less than 500m from 'Pattaya beach'

Rescuers carry air tanks to support the search for 12 boys and their football coach trapped for almost ten days in Tham Luang cave in Mae Sai district, Chiang Rai, on Monday. (Photo by Wichan Charoenkiatpakul)

CHIANG RAI: Navy Seal divers in flooded Tham Luang cave were on Monday afternoon within 500 metres of a chamber containing an elevated rock mound, nicknamed "Pattaya Beach" by cavers, which could have provided a refuge to 12 boys and their football coach trapped in flooded Tham Luang cave for more than a week when heavy rains flooded the cave, blocking the way out.

Progress has been slowed as divers need to widen parts of a narrow 100 metre stretch -- with sharp bends -- that they were unable to pass through without their air cylinders becoming jammed.

Chiang Rai governor Narongsak Osotthanakorn earlier said rescuers had managed to reach the "Sam Yak" three-way junction - and now the most critical section of the murky underground labrynth lies ahead.

"The Seal unit last night reached the T-junction and today they will press ahead to the left, but one obstacle we've found is a very small hole which we need to widen so that people can go through," the governor told reporters on Monday.

"This is today's focus. The passage must be penetrated. It is very narrow... They have not yet reached 'the (Pattaya) beach'," Mr Narongsak said.

Turning left from Sam Yak, the passage ascends, drops steeply and then bends to the left - and is not yet accessible to foreign divers and their equipment, the governor said.

'Pattaya Beach' is about two kilometres from the divers' forward command centre in the sprawling cave network's third chamber -- a total of roughly five kilometres from the main entrance of the cave in the Tham Luang Khun Nam Nang Nong forest park in Thailand's northernmost district of Mae Sai.

Deputy Prime Minister Prawit Wongsuwon said in Bangkok that rescuers hoped to reach 'Pattaya Beach' Monday -- but the strong water current in the narrow passage presents a major obstacle.

All-out efforts continued to drain water from the cave and prevent fresh water from flowing into it, further raising the water level.

Another long pipe carried by Thai Army & Park Rangers towards the cave complex. Engineers have been pumping water out of the cave all week. They’ve also run electricity and fibre optic cables in to aid the rescue effort. #thamluangcave #thamluang #ถ้ำหลวง #13ชีวิตติดถ้ำ pic.twitter.com/nwoHJU8Wzq — Howard Johnson (@Howardrjohnson) July 2, 2018

Above the cave, officials and volunteers were searching for shafts that might provide a back door into the cave.

"We are exploring 11 potential shafts today. The deepest one is 200 metres. If it goes down through, we will be very lucky," the Chiang Rai governor said.

Meanwhile, the navy deployed 20 more "Seal" divers to the site, increasing their numbers to 84.

They were working together with about 230 policemen, 840 soldiers and dozens of rescuers and officials from countries around the globe to locate 12 young footballers aged 11-16 and their 26-year-old coach trapped by floodwaters deep underground.

The boys and their coach entered the cave after their football practice on June 23 -- and the search mission entered its 10th day Monday.

Related:

Navy divers establish a forward rescue base in the third chamber of the sprawling Tham Luang cave on Sunday. (Video from Thai Navy SEAL)

(Video YouTube/Al Jazeera)