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Thai cave reopens for visitors after Wild Boars rescue

  (Agence France-Presse)
Bangkok, Thailand
Sun, November 3, 2019

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Thai cave reopens for visitors after Wild Boars rescue This handout photo taken on Nov. 1, 2019 and released by Chiang Rai Provincial Public Relations Office shows visitors standing before the statue of a Thai navy diver who died during the June 2018 rescue operation in Tham Luang cave in the Mae Sai district of Thailand's northern Chiang Rai province. Thailand reopened the cave on Nov. 1 where 12 young footballers and their coach were trapped last year in a saga that captivated the world. (AFP/Chiang Rai Provincial Public Relations Office)

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hailand has reopened the cave where 12 young footballers and their coach were trapped last year in a saga that captivated the world.

The Tham Luang cave has been closed to visitors since the Wild Boars football team were rescued alive after nearly three weeks inside the grotto's waterlogged corridors.

But the world-famous cave in northern Chiang Rai province was re-opened Friday, drawing some 2,000 tourists in a single day, a local conservation official told AFP.

"We have allowed visitors to see the mouth of the cave," said Kamolchai Kotcha, director of the local conservation office that overseas the cave.

Guests are not allowed beyond the entrance for now, where they can peer into the cave opening, but officials said they were considering allowing people deeper inside after surveying the safety of the route.

Some of the rescue equipment left behind -- including telephone wires, hoses and zip lines -- could be exhibited inside the cave for visitors to view in the future, Kotcha said.

Photos from the opening on Friday showed tourists at the site's entry, where last year the boys' bikes and backpacks were found -- alerting local police they were likely inside.

Read also: Thai cave film makes world premiere at Busan festival

The Wild Boars went into Tham Luang in June 2018 for a routine hike after a football practice, but became trapped after heavy rains blocked the only route out.

Hundreds of people descended on the remote site to help save the boys, who were found -- emaciated but alive -- on a muddy perch deep inside the cave after nine excruciating days of searching.

The boys were sedated and fitted out in full-face breathing masks before being pulled to safety through a hazardous underwater labyrinth.

Several books deals about the drama have been inked, and the first film about the rescue premiered this month at the Busan International Film Festival in South Korea. 

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