An Oklahoma mother of 11 flew to Qatar earlier this month to help rescue 10 members of Afghanistan’s all-girls robotics team, and is hoping to save more as the Taliban takes power in Kabul.
Allyson Reneau, a 60-year old-Harvard graduate with a Masters degree in international relations and U.S. space policy, took it upon herself to try and save members of the Afghan Girls Robotic Team, according to NBC.
She flew into Qatar on Aug. 9 after making a "Hail Mary" call to a former roommate at the U.S. Embassy there to help get the girls from the advancing Taliban, known for their oppressive treatment of women.
Reneau had been in contact with the team — made of girls ages 16 to 18 — since 2019, when she worked on the board of directors for Explore Mars and met the girls when they attended the organization’s annual Humans to Mars conference.
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The team was hailed in Western media as the future of the war-ravaged country, as well as a shining example of how women’s rights had improved after the U.S. invaded following 9/11.
Reneau said she "couldn’t shake" the feeling that the girls were in danger while watching the news of the advancing insurgent army in early August. The first step she took was to call Sen. Jim Inhofe, R-Okla., a ranking member of the Armed Services Committee, but that "lead went cold" when the senator became "overwhelmed with the need to help our American citizens," Reneau told NBC.
Then, she decided to try herself, hopping on a flight toward the Middle East, but still thousands of miles away from Afghanistan. Her friend in Qatar was thankfully able to help her once she arrived.
"I remembered my former roommate in D.C. a couple of years ago was transferred to Qatar," Reneau told NBC. "She said she worked in the U.S. Embassy in Qatar. … She was sure her boss would approve helping the girls."
"She wrote up a request, and I got all of their passports together," Reneau said. "She went back to the embassy at midnight and worked all night to prepare the documents [and] packets for the girls."
Reneau said it was chaotic trying to get the girls out, who "were in a sea of chaos with 8 million people and a city halfway around the world," forcing her to work at the embassy all night.
"It’s very narrow window of opportunity," she told NBC. "I knew that if I didn’t run through that door now — it’s now or never. Sometimes you only get one chance."
After one flight was canceled, 10 girls boarded the next flight from the American side of the Kabul airport, which has been a scene of violence and turmoil as residents attempt to flee the Taliban regime.
The girls were taken to a secure location in the U.S. and will pursue higher education, Reneau said.
According to NBC, Reneau is still working to get 25 more girls from the team to safety.
"All the emotion, two weeks of work for them, it hit me all at once," she said.
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Human rights groups had demanded earlier this week that Canada take in the girls robotics team, as the Taliban goes "door to door and literally taking girls out and forcing them to become child brides." The team competed there in 2018.
"[The girls] are worried about what tomorrow brings. They want to continue to be educated. They want to continue to be the future of Afghanistan, but it’s an extremely tenuous and dangerous situation for them," human rights lawyer Kimberley Motley told the Canadian Broadcasting Corp. on Sunday.
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