There has been no contact with Julen Rosello since he fell down the narrow shaft, some 100 metres deep, on January 13 while playing as his parents prepared a picnic nearby in the town of Totalan near Malaga.
After abandoning an initial plan to reach the boy with an angled tunnel because of repeated collapses and landslides, workers turned to the possibility of drilling a vertical shaft parallel to the well.But the new effort slowed as diggers hit hard granite.
They have so far bored down some 40 metres, local Canal Sur television reported. When they reach a depth of 60 metres, a team of eight expert miners will be lowered down the shaft to start digging a horizontal tunnel to the location where they believe the toddler is.
The authorities are “doing everything that is humanly possible” to rescue the boy, Juanma Moreno, president of the regional government of Andalusia, told reporters.
“But the circumstances are not helping. I hope and trust that tomorrow, Monday, we will have some positive news. But it will depend on the nature of the ground,” he added.
Rescuers used probes to explore the bottom of the well that came back with strands of hair matching the child’s DNA, as well as a bag of sweets that he was carrying when he went missing, providing confirmation that he is down the hole.
Experts told Spanish media that there are slim chances that Julen could still be alive, explaining that cold weather slows a body’s metabolism, so it needs less energy and can survive with abnormally low breathing and blood flow.
“The cold has a double edge. On the one hand it’s negative, because it can cause multiple consequences. But in this case we all hope for its better outcome: with it you gain time to survive because at lower temperatures the human metabolism slows and tissues are preserved,” Ivan Carabano, a paediatrician at Madrid’s Hospital 12 de Octubre, told the El Pais daily.
There have been cases similar to Julen’s in which a person survived 10 days in a semi-conscious state that needed less oxygen, the head of the Andalusian Federation of Speleogy, Jose Antonio Berrocal, told reporters in Totalan last week.
Spanish media, which have been covering the unprecedented rescue operations round-the-clock, have reported that Julen’s parents lost another child, aged three, in 2017. The child had cardiac problems.
The well was unmarked at the time of the accident and regional authorities in Andalusia said the necessary permission had not been sought before it was dug. — AFP
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