CHIANG RAI, THAILAND - 2018/08/07: The entrance of a cave in the forest park of Tham LuangKhun Nam Nang Non cave. Twelve boys, members of th...
CHIANG RAI, THAILAND - 2018/08/07: The entrance of a cave in the forest park of Tham LuangKhun Nam Nang Non cave. Twelve boys, members of the football team Wild Boars, aged 11 to 17 and their 25-year-old coach spent between 16 and 18 days in the Tham Luang cave in Northern Thailand where they got trapped by a sudden water surge. They were extracted from the cave during an unprecedented daring mission involving Thai and foreign divers. (Photo by Thierry Falise/LightRocket via Getty Images) |
By Ronan O'Connell, The Guardian
The park and cave complex in northern Thailand where a youth football team were trapped for 17 days over the summer has become an unlikely tourist hotspot since it reopened this month.
Tham Luang-Khun Nam Nang Non forest park in Chiang Rai province was a sleepy backwater until the rescue mission of the 12 young Thai footballers and their coach made headlines around the world in June. Since the cave complex in the park reopened, on 16 November, it has received thousands of visitors, and though people are still not allowed inside Tham Luang cave itself, where the boys were trapped by flood waters, more than 100 stalls selling souvenirs, T-shirts and food have sprung up along the road that leads to it, near the town of Mae Sai.
“This is an amazing thing that has happened for the people in this area,” said Vipa Romaneechutima, who sells lottery tickets near the entrance to the cave. “People tried to make Tham Luang a tourist attraction before, many times, but it never became popular. Now it is famous all over the world because of the boys saved from the cave. We are not just happy because of the money from tourists. We are also very proud people want to travel here to see our beautiful park. It is an honour for us,” she said.
The entrance of a cave in the forest park of Tham LuangKhun Nam Nang Non cave. Twelve boys, members of the football team Wild Boars, aged 11 to 17 and their 25-year-old coach spent between 16 and 18 days in the Tham Luang cave in Northern Thailand where they got trapped by a sudden water surge. They were extracted from the cave during an unprecedented daring mission involving Thai and foreign divers. (Photo by Thierry Falise/LightRocket via Getty Images) |
CHIANG RAI, THAILAND - JUNE 30: Volunteers enter Khun Nam Nang Non Forest Park where a a soccer team has gone missing on June 30, 2018 in Chiang Rai, Thailand. Rescuers in northern Thailand looked for alternative ways into a flooded cave as they continued the search for 12 boys and their soccer coach who have been missing in Tham Luang Nang Non cave since Saturday night after monsoon rains blocked the main entrance. U.S. Forces and British divers joined the search as they worked their way through submerged passageways in the sprawling underground caverns as the search intensifies for the young soccer team, aged between 11 to 16, and their their 25-year-old coach. (Photo by Linh Pham/Getty Images) |
“It was such an amazing thing that took place here and it feels special to be able to see it ourselves,” he said. “I imagine this will become a huge tourist attraction now”.
A Thai Airforce worker drops in by helicopter into a clearing in the forest near a possible overground opening to the Tham Luang cave, at the Khun Nam Nang Non Forest Park in Chiang Rai province on June 30, 2018 as the rescue operation continues for the children of a football team and their coach. - Rescue divers reached several kilometres inside a flooded cave on June 30 where 12 boys and their football coach have been trapped for a week, offering a flicker of hope for the harrowing search. (Photo by Lillian SUWANRUMPHA / AFP) (Photo credit should read LILLIAN SUWANRUMPHA/AFP/Getty Images) |
Visitors at the Tham Luang cave complex, Thailand |
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