US caver trapped in Türkiye to be rescued in 'several days'

Turkish local governor said that a team is prepared to extract the American explorer from underground.

Rescuers gather around a radio in Morca Cave, as they take part in a rescue operation to reach US caver Mark Dickey who fell ill and became trapped some 1,000 metres underground, near Anamur in Mersin province, southern Türkiye September 7, 2023 / Photo: Reuters
Reuters

Rescuers gather around a radio in Morca Cave, as they take part in a rescue operation to reach US caver Mark Dickey who fell ill and became trapped some 1,000 metres underground, near Anamur in Mersin province, southern Türkiye September 7, 2023 / Photo: Reuters

A team of rescuers are ready to start moving an American cave explorer trapped more than 1,000 metres underground in southern Türkiye and will have him out "within several days," Mersin Governor Ali Hamza Pehlivan has said.

Mark Dickey, 40, was on an international exploration mission in the Morca Cave in Mersin province's Taurus mountains when he began suffering from gastrointestinal bleeding at a depth of 1,040 metres.

More than 150 rescuers from Türkiye and other nations have been working to save him from the country's third-deepest cave.

"Depending on the developments at the stations in between, hopefully the evacuation will have been completed within several days," Pehlivan told reporters on Saturday.

Dickey's condition is "stable but fragile," Carl Heitmeyer, acting public information officer for the New Jersey Initial Response Team, said in an emailed statement. The cave, difficult, deep and muddy, is "very much eating up rescuers' gear," he added.

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American explorer trapped in Turkish cave awaits difficult rescue

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'Hardest part to rescue'

Footage from the operation showed Dickey lying inside the cave and receiving treatment by a medical team.

Footage also showed other teams moving down the caves with ropes and making their way through narrow passages.

"This is a vertical cave with a lot of water," Agnes Berentes, a photographer with Dickey on the mission, told Reuters news agency.

"We have to use our vertical rope techniques. And it has a lot of narrow passages. This will be the hardest part of the areas of the rescue."

The rescue operation was divided into seven sections, each given to a team from a different country, due to its complexity, said Recep Salci, the head of search and rescue for Türkiye's AFAD disaster management authority, on Friday.

Route 6