Terrorists Target Hotels Again---This Time
in Jakarta International Terrorism
Monitor--Paper No. 543
By B. Raman
According to
Indonesia's Coordinating Minister for
Political and Security Affairs, Widodo
AS, nine persons were killed and at least 42
injured in two powerful blasts that hit the
JW Marriott and the Ritz Carlton hotels in
the Mega Kuningan business area in downtown
Jakarta early on the morning of July 17,
2009. Widodo told reporters that six of the
victims were killed at the Marriott hotel,
two others at the Ritz-Carlton hotel and one
died in hospital. He also said that the 42
injured, including 13 foreigners, were being
treated at four hospitals in Jakarta. At
least one of those killed has been
identified as a business executive from New
Zealand.
2. The explosion
at the Marriott hotel was reported to have
occurred at 7:47 a.m. at the Restaurant
Syailendra in the hotel's basement, two
minutes before the explosion at the Ritz
Carlton. At the Ritz, windows were blown out
in a restaurant on the second floor. It
appeared that the improvised explosive
device (IED) had been placed inside a
restaurant in the Ritz too.
3. While there
were two explosions---one each in the two
hotels--- a third unexploded IED along with
some explosive material was subsequently
found by the police in a room of the
Marriott Hotel. The IED was deactivated by
the police. The Agence France Presse (AFP)
has quoted Presidential advisor Djali Yusuf
as saying as follows: "The control-centre
(for the terrorists) was a room at the JW
Marriott, room number 1808, where
anti-terror police found explosive materials
and an unexploded bomb. The anti-terror
police squad has managed to make the bomb
inactive."
5. With the
Jakarta blasts of July 17, 16 luxury hotels
patronised by high-budget tourists,
travelling and working businessmen,
travelling public servants and local elite,
who can afford to eat or stay in such
expensive hotels, have been the targets of
terrorist attacks since 9/11. Thirteen of
these hotels were targeted directly and
three others suffered fatalities or other
damages as a collateral effect of attacks
of which the hotels were not the primary
targets.
6. The Marriott
hotels in different cities suffered from
terrorist attacks in seven incidents--- New
York, Jakarta twice, Islamabad thrice and
Karachi once. Hotels with link-ups to the
Marriott chain were attacked twice--- in
Peshawar and in Jakarta on July 17. The
Islamabad Marriott and the Peshawar Pearl
Continental are run by the same person. The
Jakarta Ritz-Carlton has a common employees'
pool with the Marriott. An underground
passageway connects the two hotels that are
located across the road from each other. The
Ritz-Carlton group is managed by the
Ritz-Carlton Hotel Company , which is
reported to be a subsidiary of Marriott
International. The Marriott Hotels have a
good reputation for physical security.
Despite this, terrorists have managed to
strike them repeatedly.
7. Out of the 15
attacks reported after 9/11, in 12 the
attacks were mounted from outside either
through a suicide bomber or through car
bombs. In the two blasts of Jakarta of July
17 and in the Islamabad attack of October
28, 2004, the explosions were believed to
have been caused by someone inside. In the
two blasts of July 17, the IED was suspected
to have been assembled inside one of the
rooms in the Marriott, which had apparently
been rented by the terrorist or terrorists.
How did they get the explosive material for
the IEDS? Did they manage to smuggle it
inside despite tight security or did they
fabricate it inside out of commonly
available materials bought by them from one
of the shops inside? An answer to this
question is not available though the Jakarta
Police must be knowing from the recovered
unexploded IED and the explosive material
reportedly found inside a room, how and
wherefrom they got the explosive material.
8. Of the 15
attacks after 9/11, two of the attacked
hotels were Indian-owned. Ten were owned by
Jewish or Western interests or franchised to
locals by Western companies. The ownership
of the remaining three in Amman is not
known.
9. Since luxury
hotels patronised by local and foreign
social and business elite continue to be
among the favourite targets of
terrorists, standardised physical security
enhancements have to be drawn up. The past
enhancements were essentially meant to
prevent car bombers and other suicide
bombers through tightened access control.
How to prevent the fabrication of explosive
material and an assembly of an IED inside is
a question, which needs urgent attention in
the wake of the latest Jakarta blasts.
10. No one has so
far claimed responsibility for the Jakarta
blasts, but the needle of suspicion points
to the Jemaah Islamiyah.
11. Annexed below
is a list of attacks on hotels since 9/11.
This does not include the attacks on night
and tourist spots in Bali in 2002 and 2005
and in Sharm-el-Sheikh in Egypt in 2005.
(The writer is Additional Secretary (red),
Cabinet Secretariat, Govt. of India, New
Delhi and, presently, Director, Institute
For Topical Studies, Chennai. E-mail:
seventyone2@gmail.com )
ANNEXURE
9/11: The
destruction of the two towers of the New
York World Centre by Al Qaeda destroyed the
New York Marriott World Trade Center Hotel
and the 504-room Marriott Financial Center
located there. Some senior executives of the
hotel chain, who had their offices in the
towers, were killed.
May 8, 2002:
Twelve persons, nine of them French, and the
remaining Pakistanis were killed when an
explosion destroyed a bus of the Pakistani
Navy outside the Sheraton Hotel in Karachi.
Twenty-five others were injured, many of
them French. All of them were working in a
production facility of the Pakistan Navy
near Karachi where the French company
producing the Agosta class submarines was
assembling a submarine out of parts imported
from France and training Pakistani Navy
personnel in the assembly and ultimate
indigenous production of submarines out of
technology bought by Pakistan from the
French company. The bus was to transport the
French personnel to the work site as it was
doing every day. According to the Karachi
Police, the explosion appeared to have been
caused by a suicide bomber sitting inside a
car. Suspicion centred on Pakistani jihadi
organizations associated with Al Qaeda.
June 14, 2002: The
Marriott Hotel in Karachi suffered minor
damages when a suicide car bomb exploded
near the US Consulate in the same area.
Eleven persons----mostly passers-by---were
killed. The hotel was not targeted.
November 28, 2002:
A car bomb explosion outside the
Jewish-owned Paradise Hotel in Mombasa
caused a number of fatalities among Israeli
tourists.
August 5, 2003:
The Marriott Hotel in Jakarta was the direct
target of an attack in which 14 people were
killed. The pro-Al Qaeda Jemaah Islamiya was
suspected.
October 28, 2004:
The Marriott Hotel in Islamabad suffered
some damage to its lobby, as a bomb went off
inside the hotel. Fifteen persons were
injured, including an American diplomat.
November 9, 2005:
The Al Qaeda in Iraq , headed by Abu Musab
al-Zarqawi (subsequently killed), reportedly
claimed responsibility for blasts directed
at three hotels in Amman in which about 60
innocent civilians, the majority of them
Jordanian nationals, were killed
January 26, 2007:
An alleged suicide bomber and a private
security guard, who stopped him for
questioning, were killed when the terrorist
blew himself up in the parking lot of the
Islamabad Marriott hotel.
September 20,
2008: Sixty persons---including some
foreigners--- were reported to have been
killed in the Islamabad Marriott Hotel when
a truck bomber carrying about one ton of
explosive blew the truck up, when he was
stopped for questioning at the gate by the
security guards. Al Qaeda operating through
the Lashkar-e-Jhangvi, an anti-Shia
organization, suspected.
November 26 to 29,
2008: Six terrorists of the Lashkar-e-Toiba
(LET) of Pakistan, divided into two groups
of four and two and carrying hand-held
weapons, forced their way into the Taj Mahal
Hotel and the Oberoi Hotel of Mumbai. They
killed 36 persons in the Taj Mahal Hotel and
35 in the Oberoi Hotel before they were
finally liquidated by the National Security
Guards. Of the 71 persons killed by them in
the two hotels, 20 were foreign nationals.
June 9, 2009: At
least 16 persons, including two foreigners
(a Serb and a Filippino), were reported to
have been killed and over 60 others injured
when a group of three terrorists forced
their way into the parking lot of the Pearl
Continental Hotel of Peshawar at around
10-30 PM and blew up an explosive-laden
truck. Two terrorists with hand-held
weapons, who were believed to have been
traveling in a car, engaged with the guards
at the security barrier near the gate of the
hotel in an exchange of fire and enabled the
truck bomber drive into the parking lot. It
was not known what happened to the two
terrorists with hand-held weapons. They
were not captured.