Rescue teams pull seven stranded from Laos cave after six-day flood ordeal
Seven hikers, trapped since Sunday in a Laos cave inundated by monsoon rains, were freed overnight after a grueling extraction marred by rising waters. The final survivor emerged at 3:47 a.m. local time in Vientiane Province.
Seven hikers, including four Britons and two Australians, were airlifted to hospital in Vientiane after spending six nights submerged in Tham Nam Cave, 40 kilometers northeast of the capital. Rescue teams from Thailand, Australia, and France worked nonstop through treacherous flash floods that swallowed entire sections of the cave network.
Mountain guides from the Vientiane Provincial Rescue Association first located the group Sunday evening via thermal imaging after torrential rains collapsed the cave’s main entrance. Continuous downpours had turned the limestone tunnels into deadly rapids, forcing rescuers to use inflatable rafts and dive through submerged passages to reach the stranded hikers.
Key Points
- ✅ Seven hikers rescued after six days trapped in Tham Nam Cave
- ⚡ Floodwaters peaked at 3.2 meters, submerging entire cave sections
- 💡 International team included Thai, Australian, and French divers
Two Thai Navy SEALs suffered decompression injuries during the extraction, one of whom remains in critical condition at Mahosot Hospital. The hikers, aged 24 to 41, were malnourished but conscious when pulled from the cave. Medical staff report no signs of hypothermia despite immersion in icy floodwaters.
| Country | Number of Rescuers | Primary Role |
|---|---|---|
| Thailand | 18 | Diving and surface support |
| Australia | 6 | Medical and logistics |
| France | 4 | Cave mapping and rigging |
Laos’ Ministry of Public Security confirmed the team entered the cave without proper permits, violating national cave exploration regulations. Authorities have launched an investigation into the incident, which has drawn global attention to safety standards in the region’s growing adventure tourism sector.
💡 Pro Tip
Cave explorers should check local flood forecasts and carry waterproof GPS devices with offline maps before entering limestone cave systems in monsoon-prone regions.
Rescue leaders say the operation was the most complex in Laos since the 2018 Tham Luang cave rescue in neighboring Thailand, which saved 12 boys and their soccer coach. Officials warn that rising temperatures and continued rains could trigger further cave-ins, complicating rehabilitation efforts.
- Sunday, 4:22 p.m. — First distress signal received via satellite communicator
- Monday, 2:11 a.m. — Thermal drones locate group 1.8 kilometers inside cave
- Wednesday, 7:45 p.m. — Last survivor extracted after 14 hours of continuous diving
Laos’ National Disaster Management Office has allocated £1.8 million to reinforce cave entrances and install early-warning systems across 12 high-risk sites near Vientiane.
📋 By The Numbers
- 6 days — Duration trapped in cave
- 40 km — Distance from Vientiane city center
- 14 hours — Longest single rescue dive
- £1.8 million — Emergency funding approved
The rescued hikers remain under observation for potential infections and psychological trauma. Social media posts from relatives describe emotional reunions in hospital corridors, with one British parent stating, “We’re just relieved they’re alive.” Authorities urge caution as the cave remains structurally unstable and closed to the public.