Thai cave rescue and the Indian connection

Updated - July 11, 2018 08:18 am IST

Published - July 11, 2018 08:17 am IST - Pune

Thailand Navy SEAL personnel leave after a successful mission to rescue to 12 boys and their football coach trapped in a flooded cave in northern Thailand’s Tham Luang area on July 10, 2018. Photo: Facebook/@ThaiSEAL

Thailand Navy SEAL personnel leave after a successful mission to rescue to 12 boys and their football coach trapped in a flooded cave in northern Thailand’s Tham Luang area on July 10, 2018. Photo: Facebook/@ThaiSEAL

Experts from a Pune-headquartered firm gave technical support in the operations to rescue a football team trapped inside a cave system in Thailand, the company said here today.

After the Indian Embassy recommended to the Thai authorities that they could use Kirlosker Brothers’ Limited’s (KBL) expertise in “dewatering”, the company sent teams from its offices in India, Thailand and the United Kingdom to the site, it said.

Its experts were on site at the cave in Tham Luang since July 5 and offered “technical know-how and advice on dewatering and pumps involved in the rescue operation,” said a KBL release.

The KBL had also offered to provide four specialised high capacity Autoprime dewatering pumps, which were kept ready at Kirloskarvadi plant in Maharashtra to be airlifted to Thailand, it said.

The final five members of the young football team were rescued from the flooded Thai cave today after spending 18 harrowing days trapped deep inside.

A total of 12 children, aged from 11 to 16, and their coach, ventured into the Tham Luang cave in mountainous northern Thailand on June 23 after football practise and got trapped when heavy rains caused flooding.

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