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Evacuation of Middlebury College students from Alexandria, Egypt, described in Boston press

O'Ryan Johnson of the Boston Herald describes the evacuation of Middlebury College students from Alexandria, Egypt, after another assistance provider was unable to help them:

O’Ryan Johnson of the Boston Herald describes the evacuation of Middlebury College students from Alexandria, Egypt, after another assistance provider was unable to help them:

 

As opposition groups urged a million Egyptians to take to the streets and demanded President Hosni Mubarak’s ouster, two dozen Middlebury College students flew from Alexandria’s airport last night thanks to a Boston-based security firm, after harrowing days in the increasingly lawless country.

“The good news is that the airports are a safe environment,” Global Rescue CEO Daniel Richards said. “We brought an airlift in from Europe . . . rendezvoused with the air asset, loaded the students on, and they’re on their way home.”

Richards said his teams of former special-operations soldiers in Egypt will remain and are trying to get another 175 Americans out of the country by the end of today.

Michael Geisler, vice president of languages at Middlebury College, said the school has run an Arabic language studies program from Alexandria for the past four years. He said they chose the nation and the city for its safety and political stability. However, not long after the protests began, he said land line phones went down, then the Internet, and they relied on cell phones to stay in touch with students. Geisler said the college spoke with them every half hour. Within moments of the start of Friday’s protests, which included Egyptian army tanks rolling into Alexandria, the college decided the students were no longer safe. Staff efforts and another security firm couldn’t get the kids out, so they turned to Global Rescue.

“They had security agents there within three hours of the signing of the contract. I don’t know how they did that, honestly,” a relieved Geisler said.

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USA Today offers travel advice about evacuation from Egypt

The USA Today interviews Global Rescue CEO Dan Richards in a Q&A about getting to safety in Egypt:

The USA Today interviews Global Rescue CEO Dan Richards in a Q&A about getting to safety in Egypt:

By: Laura Bly

As U.S. residents and travelers scramble to leave Egypt in the wake of a State Department warning and offer of evacuation flights, other would-be tourists are wondering whether they’ll get their money back for canceled trips. Answers to some of the most common questions:

Q. I’m in Egypt now. How do I get out?

A. The U.S. State Department expects to evacuate 1,200 Americans today and 1,000 Tuesday on charter flights from Cairo to “safe havens” in Europe, most likely Athens, Istanbul and Nicosia, Cyprus. Flights could continue for several days, and may expand to Luxor, Aswan or other cities if needed. Travelers with tickets on commercial airlines should contact those carriers first; the State Department warns that priority on evacuation charters will be given to those with serious medical conditions and the cost (typically that of a one-way commercial flight) must be reimbursed. Travelers in need of evacuation flights should send an email to EgyptEmergencyUSC@state.gov or call (202) 501-4444. Updates are also being posted via the State Department’s Twitter feed.

Global Rescue, a travel assistance and rescue company, says it has been asked to evacuate about 250 people – mostly Americans – from Egypt since Friday. So far, it has flown about a quarter of its members in Egypt to cities like Amman, Jordan, Prague, Istanbul and Athens, and more calls are coming in daily.

“It’s been all systems go since Friday,” CEO Dan Richards told USA TODAY’s Roger Yu. “The need for evacuation has grown since the demonstration intensified last week.” The company transports customers to “collection points” and reroutes them to nearby airports for flights on private aircraft. Evacuations are easier in smaller cities than in Cairo, where airspace is more limited. Global Rescue received a call from a student group in Alexandria Sunday evening at 9 p.m. local time, and flew them out early Monday afternoon.

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Egypt Update: Global Rescue evacuates 37 students from Alexandria

Thirty-seven students are safe in Europe after Global Rescue security teams evacuated them from Alexandria, Egypt.

Thirty-seven students from two American colleges, including 24 from Middlebury College, are safe in Europe after Global Rescue security teams evacuated them from Alexandria, Egypt on Monday night. They were transported to Prague aboard a Boeing 737 and from there were preparing to return to their home airports via commercial flights.

Earlier, Global Rescue extracted the first employees of an American company from Cairo on Sunday afternoon. Security teams collected the foreign nationals from various points around the capital and then evacuated them via fixed-wing aircraft to Jordan. From there they were transported to London and to Boston.

Global Rescue has deployed security teams to Egypt to provide security, transport and extraction services for several hundred clients in the country. The teams are led by special operations veterans that include former Navy SEALs and members of the Navy’s Special Warfare Command.

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USA Today – A traveler’s guide to the crisis in Egypt: What you need to…

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Global Rescue featured in Forbes magazine

Forbes magazine's Brian Wingfield profiles Global Rescue and its work in Egypt:

Forbes magazine’s Brian Wingfield profiles Global Rescue and its work in Egypt:

Thousands of foreign nationals have reportedly crammed into the Cairo airport for evacuation from the turmoil in Egypt. But a select group of them started leaving last last Friday, when the protests first reached a boiling point.

Privileged diplomats? Nope. They’re clients of Global Rescue, a Boston-based firm that specializes in providing security, evacuation and medical services to clients in some of the world’s hot spots. The company is under contract to evacuate approximately 200 people from Egypt, primarily in Cairo and Alexandria. Most are corporate clients–Global Rescue won’t release client names without permission–though some are affiliated with academic institutions, and not all are Americans.

 As of Monday morning, about 25% of the firm’s clients had been evacuated, says Global Rescue founder and CEO Daniel Richards. The remainder are expected to be out by Tuesday night.

Read more here.

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Boston Herald spotlights Global Rescue’s evacuations out of Egypt

The Boston Herald's ORyan Johnson describes Global Rescue's security evacuations in his article, "Help's on the way in Egypt."

The Boston Herald’s ORyan Johnson describes Global Rescue’s security evacuations in his article, “Help’s on the way in Egypt.”

As the U.S. Embassy in Cairo urged Americans to get out of Egypt amid its ongoing chaotic and violent political upheaval, Boston-based Global Rescue has teams of ex-military security officers and paramedics coordinating a latter-day exodus, shepherding hundreds of U.S. corporate clients out of the country.

Global Rescue CEO Daniel Richards said over the next three days his company has orders to safely remove 200 to 300 people from the unstable cities and return them home.

“We deploy our personnel to the area, we collect them at a rally point and we organize transportation from the rally point to a safe location combining air, sea and land assets to affect the evacuation and extraction,” Richards said. “Our personnel on the ground are led by former special ops personnel who are very familiar with operating in difficult and potentially dangerous environments.”

Read more here.

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WBZ-TV – WBZ-TV looks at Global Rescue’s mission in Egypt

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WCVB Channel 5 News – Local Company Helps In Egyptian Evacuations

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The Boston Herald – Help’s on the way in Egypt

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Forbes – The business of evacuation in Egypt

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The Boston Globe – Boston area natives cope amid turmoil in Egypt

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Global Rescue extracts first wave of evacuees from Cairo

Global Rescue has extracted the first employees of an American company from Cairo on Sunday afternoon.

Global Rescue has extracted the first employees of an American company from Cairo on Sunday afternoon. Security teams collected the foreign nationals from various points around the capital and then evacuated them via fixed-wing aircraft to Jordan. From there they were transported to their respective home countries.

Over the weekend, Global Rescue deployed security teams to Egypt to provide security, transport and extraction services for several hundred clients in country. The teams are led by special operations veterans that include former Navy SEALs and members of the Navy’s Special Warfare Command.