Pond Opens Up Images from Cave Rescue of 7 People Trapped in Laos: Narrow Passages and High Water Make Access Extremely Difficult
Seven workers trapped in a collapsed Laotian gold mine tunnel face worsening conditions as rising water and narrow passages complicate rescue efforts by Thai teams deployed to Luang Prabang Province.
Pond Chakrkrishna, representative of Thailand's rescue team aiding 7 people trapped in a Laotian cave, has revealed footage showing the narrow passages, high water levels, and extremely difficult access conditions inside the cave. On November 24, 2569, a gold mine tunnel collapsed in Luang Prabang, Xayaboury Province, Laos, leaving 7 workers stranded unable to exit. The Thai rescue team deployed to assist, beginning survey operations at 16:05. The Thailand Rescue Diver page shared clips from the scene showing extreme working conditions with tight passages, rising water, and severe access challenges. Pond revealed that continuous rainfall is causing water levels inside the cave to rise constantly, forcing all personnel to remain stationed at the incident site. The mountain access route spans over 4 kilometers and takes 1-2 hours to traverse, meaning rescuers must camp at the location. The phrase "We can only rest at the incident site" underscores that this is no ordinary rescue mission, but a race against time and nature itself.