Luxury hotels become target

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Luxury hotels become target
Oluşturulma Tarihi: Kasım 27, 2008 20:00

SINGAPORE - With Western diplomatic compounds increasingly more secure against bombings or armed assaults, luxury hotels in Asia are seen as 'second embassies' and become favored targets for militant groups, analysts argue, after a rampage across Mumbai leaves over 100 dead. 'It's very much an attack on the 'West',' says one counter-terrorism expert.

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Asia's luxury hotels have become a favored target for violent Islamic militant groups and security must be stepped up, experts said yesterday after a deadly hostage taking at two hotels in Mumbai. A group calling itself the "Deccan Mujahideen" said it carried out the attacks late Wednesday at several locations including the Oberoi Trident Hotel and the iconic Taj Mahal Palace.

"We have seen that there is a global trend now to attack Western hotels," said Rohan Gunaratna, head of the International Center for Political Violence and Terrorism Research in Singapore.

"The threat to hotels has increased significantly." Although the Taj and Oberoi are part of Indian-based hotel firms, witnesses said the gunmen had specifically chosen U.S. and British citizens to take hostage.

Other recent attacks in the region have also targeted hotels belonging to Western companies and which, are known to host foreigners.

These include: The September truck bombing of Islamabad's Marriott hotel that killed at least 60; a January assault which killed eight people at Kabul's top hotel, the Serena; suicide attacks on the Radisson SAS hotel, the Grand Hyatt and Days Inn in Amman, Jordan in 2005; the 2003 blast that killed 12 at Jakarta's JW Marriott; and a 2002 car bombing that killed 11 French engineers outside Karachi's Sheraton hotel.

"I think it's very much an attack on the 'West'," said Nick O'Brien, an associate professor in counter-terrorism at Charles Sturt University in Canberra.

Gunaratna said that with Western diplomatic compounds increasingly more secure against bombings or armed assaults, attackers have turned on hotels as "the second embassies".

Improvement needed
The Mumbai attacks are a reminder that any Western hotel in a place such as India, which is prone to terrorism should improve its security or at least review it, said O'Brien.

Indonesia's experience has shown that improving security works, analysts said. Since the Marriott and other bombings in Jakarta, hotels, office buildings and other targets have installed metal detectors, guards with mirrors and other devices to search vehicles. Some hotels have built special ramps and barriers that make it difficult to drive right up to the lobby.

"It has been a deterrent in Indonesia," said Sidney Jones, Jakarta-based senior adviser to the International Crisis Group of political analysts.

She said bombers who struck Indonesia's Bali Island in 2005 rejected hotels as targets because of the tighter security. They chose instead open-air beachfront restaurants and another target, killing 23 people and injuring many more. But while security measures have helped in Indonesia, Jones said "it seems like a hugely daunting task" to protect India's hotels, partly because of their sheer numbers.

Gunaratna said countries like India and Pakistan that face a significant terrorism threat should ask the government to post armed guards at international hotels. There should generally be greater cooperation between hotel security and government forces, he said. O'Brien said the best defense is distance -- keeping the hotel well back from a secured perimeter. But analysts said that unless a hotel is turned into a fortress it is difficult to completely guard against well-trained armed assailants and those who are prepared to die.

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