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The 12 boys and their soccer coach rescued from a flooded cave in Thailand waved, smiled and offered traditional "wai" greetings in their first public appearance on Wednesday, at a national broadcast in the northern province of Chiang Rai.
Doctors, relatives and friends, some in yellow traditional garb, greeted the boys, aged 11 to 16, and their 25-year-old coach. They wore T-shirts emblazoned with a red graphic of a wild boar and carried in footballs they kicked gently on the set.
"Bringing the Wild Boars Home," read a banner in Thai on the set, designed to resemble a soccer field, complete with goalposts and nets, where the boys arrayed themselves on a dais, beside five members of the rescue team.
A crowd of media and onlookers was penned behind barricades as the group arrived in vans from the hospital where it has stayed since last week's international effort to extricate it from a flooded cave complex where it had been trapped.
"I told everyone fight on, don't despair," said one of the boys, recounting how they battled during the excruciating days in the cave.
'I told everyone fight on, don't despair': Thai boys, soccer coach recall how they survived cave ordeal | CBC News