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Members of the media attend a news conference about the death of a Thai rescue diver after he fell unconscious during part of an operation, in front of the Tham Luang cave complex, where 12 boys and their soccer coach are trapped, in the northern province of Chiang Rai, Thailand, July 6, 2018. Image Credit: Reuters

A member of the Thai navy team attempting to rescue a group of young boys and their soccer coach from a flooded cave fell unconscious from a lack of oxygen and later died in hospital, officials said Friday.

Speaking at a press conference, a commander of the Thai navy SEAL group said the retired navy SEAL was placing oxygen tanks along an exit route to assist the boys in their escape from the cave when his own oxygen ran out. He was found unconscious around 1am Friday and transferred to a hospital, but was pronounced dead on arrival.


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The fatality raises fears that a rescue mission could be fraught and even deadly for the boys, who have been trapped for nearly two weeks.

The diver was identified as Saman Kunam. Officials did not specify his age.

"This mission is really scary and dangerous," Pasakorn Boonyalak, deputy governor of Chiang Rai province, said at the press conference.

The diver was about half a mile from where the 12 young soccer players and their coach have been trapped since June 23, when rains flooded the vast and complex cave system they were exploring in northern Thailand. The group was found Monday after a dramatic search and rescue that gripped the world, but authorities have warned that getting them out will be a fraught and difficult process, especially since none of them can swim and could panic if they had to dive out, with potentially deadly consequences.

Officials said Thursday evening that three of the boys are in poor health.

Authorities say that they remain undeterred by the death of the rescue diver, and will continue the rescue mission as planned. Water levels continue to fall in the cave, but heavy rain is forecast for as soon as Friday afternoon, breaking a relatively dry spell in recent days.

The priority, Pasakorn and army officials say, is getting oxygen to the boys as it slowly runs out. Four navy SEALS are stationed with the boys to monitor their health, provide food to them and check on oxygen levels.