Dozens of Afghan refugees rescued in Israeli-Emirati mission

Israeli philanthropists helped to rescue around 40 at-risk Afghans from the Taliban in a daring mission from Kabul.

Asylum seekers from Afghanistan reach Abu Dhabi, the United Arab Emirates on Sept. 6, 2021 (Image:IsraAID)

Several Israeli philanthropists helped bring dozens of Afghans fleeing Taliban rule, including female athletes, to Abu Dhabi, it was revealed last week.

The rescue operation led by Aaron G. Frenkel, an aviation professional who had helped airlift thousands of Jews out of the Soviet Union, ended on Sept. 6, as 41 asylum seekers from Afghanistan reached Abu Dhabi in the United Arab Emirates. The Euro-Asian Jewish Congress detailed the operation in a statement Sunday.

Frenkel, who is the chairman of the Congress, teamed up with the group’s honorary president, Alexander Machkevich, and the Canadian-Israeli billionaire Sylvan Adams to extract the passengers from Afghanistan to neighboring Tajikistan.

Adams provided the funds for chartering a private jet from Tajikistan to Abu Dhabi, carrying on board members of Afghanistan’s former women’s cycling team, human rights activists and members of a robotics team, including women, the statement said. All were deemed at risk of reprisals from the Taliban, the statement said.

According to The Telegraph, after clearing several checkpoints they were temporarily stuck at the Tajikistan border, forcing the young women to spend a tantalising two-day wait in a nearby safe house as they sought permission to cross.

The rescue team eventually secured permission from the president of Tajikistan to cross the border, at which point Israeli aid workers met the girls in the capital of Dushanbe.

The Israeli international humanitarian agency IsraAID and officials from several governments also were involved in the rescue operation.

“When troubling events such as the current situation in Afghanistan occur in the world, we have an obligation to act as leaders,” Frenkel said.

 “If it is within our power to provide assistance then it is our duty to come to the rescue of any human being.”

In the 1980s, Frenkel used his connections in the aviation industry to help the Jewish Agency airlift Jews out of Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union prior to its collapse.

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