10 Jul, 17:23 (IST)

According to Thai media reports, all 12 boys of the Wild Boars soccer team and their coach has been rescued from the Thuam Luang caves in Chiang Rai. The operation has been called off.

10 Jul, 17:05 (IST)

The 11th boy has been rescued from Thailand's Thuam Luang caves. Operation is underway to free the 12th child and the coach. The rescue mission is hopeful of successfully evacuating the duo at the earliest.

10 Jul, 15:47 (IST)

Soon after the 9th boy was rescued and attended by the medical facility at Tham Luang caves, the 10th boy has also been rescued. Now 2 boys and their coach remain inside. With the rescue team working in full force, they too will reach out safely. The rescue operation is proving to be a challenge given the weather conditions but the Thai Navy officials are working with great speed. With 10 boys already safe and sound the hope is high on rescuing of all the five together. The earlier two days the rescue operations were in a manner to rescue children in group of 4. 

10 Jul, 14:58 (IST)

Today is supposedly the final phase of the evacuation of Thai boys from the Tham Luang Caves. Today's rescue operation is a little different from the previous two days as there are 5 people to be evacuated including the coach. A Thai Navy official on the site has reported that one more boy has been successfully rescued. He has been taken to the medical facility on the site. The 10th boy is also on the way out and reportedly at the third chamber of the cave. 

10 Jul, 12:00 (IST)

Tesla chief Elon Musk was developing a device to help in the rescue of the Thai boys from the complex cave network in Thailand. Musk has reached the spot with his kid-size submarine but the rescue operator head said it is not very practical to be put into uses. The final phase of the rescue mission to pull out the remaining 4 boys and their coach has begun.Musk's efforts to develop the device have been making it to headline but unfortunately, it won't come to use. The mission head Narongsak Osotthanakorn said, "Even though their equipment is technologically sophisticated, it doesn't fit with our mission to go in the cave. The equipment they brought to help us is not practical with our mission."

10 Jul, 11:23 (IST)

After successfully evacuating 8 boys over a course of two days, the third phase of the rescue operation of Thai boys has begun. Divers have descended into the flooded Tham Luang cave to get the remaining 4 boys along with their coach. The weather condition in the area is not very suitable which raises more concern. “The team of Thai and foreign divers has gone back in to try to bring out the last four boys and their coach, in what one person involved in the operation described as a race against time — the rain is likely to increase water levels in the cave system," according to BBC's Jonathan Head. Everyone's hoping for a successful execution of the rescue plan in the final lap. The boys who were rescued in the last couple of days are in the hospital and said to be in a healthy state. 

All eyes are on the gruelling rescue operation of the 12 boys and their coach from the Thai football team from the Tham Luang cave in northern Thailand. The rescue operations have been in full force from Sunday, with four boys rescued on the day one. On the second day too, experienced divers brought out 4 boys successfully. The operations have been planned for four boys per day as it takes 20 hours to reset all the oxygen tanks. Now with last 4 boys and their coach still inside, it remains to be seen if all the 5 of them will be rescued today.

Rescue chief Narongsak Ostanakorn has said that it all depends upon the weather conditions today to be seen if the operations can be extended to get one more person out together. The rescue operation for day three will be different than the earlier two as they were planned for a group of four. Two divers are assigned to each boy. Osatanakorn was quoted, “the plan is designed for rescuing four” and “for safety, the best number is four”. Although the governor of Chiang Rai said he hopes for "100 percent success" and that all the five boys could be rescued.

The rescued boys are admitted at the Chiang Rai Prachanukroh hospital for medical examination and they are reported to be stable. The group went missing since June 23 when they visited the complex caves for an outing. The heavy rainfall and floods in the caves made it difficult to spot them.