Post by sweet soul on Jan 21, 2009 10:38:56 GMT
Britain's top hotels have been put on high terror alert in the wake of the deadly Mumbai siege which left almost 200 dead, the Home Secretary Jacqui Smith has revealed.
Britain's top hotels have been put on high terror alert in the wake of the deadly Mumbai siege which left almost 200 dead, the Home Secretary Jacqui Smith has revealed.
New security guidance had been issued to managers and and terror response training given to staff, she has told MPs.
It had been feared guests and shoppers in London were being left vulnerable from possible' copy cat' atrocities here.
Labour MP Keith Vaz, chairing a meeting of the Commons home affairs committee, said he had recently visited the Indian city and seen the "quite serious searches" carried out there.
Yet when I went to a hotel on Park Lane (on Monday), there were no such searches. Does it worry you that in those areas that might be subject to terrorist attack, those private sector organisations are not really prepared?" he asked the Home Secretary.
"We have had pictures of the January sales where hundreds, thousands of people were going to some of our biggest shops in Oxford Street. Is it not a worry to you that there are no searches going on?"
Ms Smith told him: "The protection of this country from potential terrorist attack to that extent is always a worry for any home secretary.
"I think the Mumbai attacks...have caused us to consider the protective security arrangements that we have in place. A lot of detailed work has been and will go on in relation to that.
"There is always a balance between enabling people to go about their lives, free, in this country - which is what terrorists are seeking to undermine and attack - and having in place appropriate protective security measures - not all of which are instantly visible to people when they are out shopping or in hotels.
"We have taken the opportunity of the review that we have done to accelerate the publication of protective security guidance to both hotels and hotel security professionals and giving them the best advice.
"We have a network of counter-terrorism security advisers who are able to supplement that advice by actually visiting specific venues and delivering training."
www.metro.co.uk/news/article.html?Top_British_hotels_in_new_terror_alert&in_article_id=490810&in_page_id=34&in_a_source=
Britain's top hotels have been put on high terror alert in the wake of the deadly Mumbai siege which left almost 200 dead, the Home Secretary Jacqui Smith has revealed.
New security guidance had been issued to managers and and terror response training given to staff, she has told MPs.
It had been feared guests and shoppers in London were being left vulnerable from possible' copy cat' atrocities here.
Labour MP Keith Vaz, chairing a meeting of the Commons home affairs committee, said he had recently visited the Indian city and seen the "quite serious searches" carried out there.
Yet when I went to a hotel on Park Lane (on Monday), there were no such searches. Does it worry you that in those areas that might be subject to terrorist attack, those private sector organisations are not really prepared?" he asked the Home Secretary.
"We have had pictures of the January sales where hundreds, thousands of people were going to some of our biggest shops in Oxford Street. Is it not a worry to you that there are no searches going on?"
Ms Smith told him: "The protection of this country from potential terrorist attack to that extent is always a worry for any home secretary.
"I think the Mumbai attacks...have caused us to consider the protective security arrangements that we have in place. A lot of detailed work has been and will go on in relation to that.
"There is always a balance between enabling people to go about their lives, free, in this country - which is what terrorists are seeking to undermine and attack - and having in place appropriate protective security measures - not all of which are instantly visible to people when they are out shopping or in hotels.
"We have taken the opportunity of the review that we have done to accelerate the publication of protective security guidance to both hotels and hotel security professionals and giving them the best advice.
"We have a network of counter-terrorism security advisers who are able to supplement that advice by actually visiting specific venues and delivering training."
www.metro.co.uk/news/article.html?Top_British_hotels_in_new_terror_alert&in_article_id=490810&in_page_id=34&in_a_source=