Feral Jundi

Saturday, October 24, 2009

India: Security Summit in Mumbai, and Private Security Increases

Filed under: India — Tags: , , , , , — Matt @ 11:21 AM

Other companies have also launched security services. The Indian building firm DLF has formed TerraForce, its own security outfit, trained by the Israeli army and the US marines, to patrol its properties. Infosys, the IT giant, and the country’s largest private-sector firm, Reliance Industries, have both been allotted permanent protection from India’s state Central Industrial Security Force (CISF), whose officers, unlike those in private security firms, are permitted to carry firearms.

Hiring private security is arguably necessary, given the evident failings of the Indian state security forces during the attacks. The police were armed with nothing but bamboo “lathis” or sticks when they had to face the militants. Members of the elite National Security Guard (NSG) took eight hours to travel from their base in the state of Haryana to the hotels, and then it took two more days to defeat the 10 gunmen. 

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   Well there’s your problem India.  You don’t bring bamboo “lathis” to a gun fight. lol All kidding aside, it will be interesting to see what comes out of the meeting of the minds during this security summit. I certainly hope Incident Command is at least given a mention during this summit, because if they have any hope of defeating an attack like this, it will come from unity of effort and a fast and efficient means of getting everyone on the same sheet of music in the beginning stages of an attack.  The private guards like Terraforce, or the police units, military units and fire units all should have radios that can be programmed or are set up already to communicate with one another.  An Incident Commander on scene, needs to take the reins of the situation, and bring to bear the necessary resources to deal with the developing situation.  And when seconds and minutes count, all the little details of command and control need to be hashed out, well before another Mumbai attack.  That is how you prepare for this.  I can’t stress enough how important it is to get everyone under the same umbrella of Incident Command, in order for this system to properly work.  Your first responders are the ones that will be able to confront and defeat the attack before it gets worse. And if they are organized and know what to do in order to take control of a situation, then you will see a disaster/attack go from chaos to organized chaos, giving everyone involved a higher chance of survival.

   On a side note, I am interested in this whole TerraForce thing?  That must be a typo about the US Marines training them?  I just couldn’t find anything to support that claim and perhaps what the article meant to say is that it was ‘former US Marines’.  Maybe some Embassy guys, or some unit came in to train them, and I could be wrong.  Either way, if any of the readers have any input about TerraForce, let me know. –Matt

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Mumbai unbowed by attacks

Richard Orange

October 24. 2009

Early next month, the head of London’s Metropolitan Police, the former secretary of the US Department of Homeland Security, and a panel of international security experts will gather in Mumbai’s Trident Hotel for a “security and resilience summit”.

That some of the world’s foremost experts on terrorism, including Sir Paul Stephenson of the London Met and the former homeland security secretary Michael Chertoff, are willing to spend a day and night in a hotel where militants killed more than 30 people just a year earlier is a sign of how much the city has recovered. (Many of the same faces were in the Trident for a similar conference as early as January).

In the time since 10 Pakistani gunmen brought terror to Mumbai for two days starting last November 26, India’s main business hub has bounced back. The Bombay Stock Exchange reopened for trading two days after the attack started, even while gunmen were holding police at bay in the Taj Mahal Palace hotel just a five-minute walk away. Remarkably, the market’s Sensex index finished the day’s trading 0.7 per cent up.

In the first two days, the city lost about US$500 million (Dh1.83 billion), said Narinder Nayar, the chairman of Bombay First, which is organising the security conference. “But has anyone left Bombay because of the attacks?” he asked. “No. Within 48 hours, the city was back to normal.”The Sensex is now trading more than 80 per cent higher than it was a year ago, boosted by a rebound in the Indian economy this summer.

The greatest impact has been on international companies and the 75,000 expatriates who work in the city.If the delegates at next month’s conference want to be properly insured – and most will want to be – they will find premiums are still stubbornly above where they were before the attacks.“We have seen that since the attacks, Mumbai has been rated on a relatively higher risk scale by Lloyd’s as well as other insurers, especially on personal accident insurance as well as kidnap and ransom,” says Smita Malik, the director of commercial sales at Clements International, based in Washington, which specialises in insuring expatriate workers.

In the month after the attack, investment by non-Indians willing to engage in business in India dried up, says Richard Dailly, the managing director in the country for Kroll, an international risk consultancy. “It was almost as though someone had flicked a switch.”Many of the city’s expatriate workers sent their families home early for Christmas, and some firms even repatriated staff.This was entirely what those planning the attacks had intended. By targeting Mumbai’s two leading business hotels, they sought to undermine the city’s importance as an international business hub.

Paul Polman, the new global chief executive of Unilever, the Anglo-Dutch consumer goods giant, and his predecessor Patrick Cescau, were two of the senior international executives trapped in the Taj hotel during the siege. The company had been holding a handover ceremony for its leading Indian executives.Bankers from the US investment bank Morgan Stanley, meanwhile, were trapped for hours in the Trident, where the company had its Mumbai office. Top executives from HSBC and Warner Brothers were also trapped inside.

But confidence has since slowly returned, Mr Dailly says. “Non-Indian businesses operating in Mumbai have not forgotten that there is a terrorism threat in India, but they recognise that it is entirely manageable, much as it is operating in Istanbul, Madrid or London, cities which have also been recent targets of terrorism,” he says.When the Trident reopened at the end of December, Morgan Stanley decided to move back into its suite there and, in March, Mr Polman returned to the Taj Palace for another company conference, joking that he had come “to finish a meal”.

Mr Polman spent the night in the hotel’s modern Tower section, as the hotel’s best rooms in the heavily damaged 105-year-old heritage section will not be ready until January.Others, such as Hillary Clinton, the US secretary of state, have also made a point of staying in the hotel, and even business people who were wounded in the attacks say they would return to Mumbai. HarnishPatel, a British property executive who was badly wounded when the militants fired on Leopold Cafe, had originally planned to discuss his job prospects with a number of firms in Mumbai.

After being shot three times in the legs, Mr Patel had to use crutches until March. But he has since recovered and hopes today to beat his 2006 time in the UK’s BUPA Great South Run.He is still looking for work, and while he wants to stay in the UK in the near future, he says Mumbai is still an option in the long term. “I wouldn’t disregard going to India again,” he says. “This kind of attack can happen anywhere in the world. It wouldn’t put me off.

“Indians are a resilient bunch. It’s probably where it comes from in me: my family had to go from India to Africa, and in this country we’ve had to work from nothing. It probably gives you character. It’s why I’ve come back the way I have. It’s embedded in me somewhere.”Given Mumbai’s similarly rapid recovery after the bomb blasts in the city in 2003, it is difficult to disagree with him.Still, just as the cost of insuring expatriate workers has increased, so has the cost of protecting them. Sandeep Sudan, the head of the northern region for Mahindra Special Services, one of a burgeoning number of Indian security firms, says business has increased by as much as 40 per cent since the attacks.

“Revenue-wise, we are seeing good growth,” he says. “There has been an increase in customers, primarily related to physical security.”Raghu Raman, the chief executive of Mahindra, spent 50 to 60 hours outside the Taj on the nights of the attack, providing advice by telephone to Mr Polman and other clients trapped inside.

Other companies have also launched security services. The Indian building firm DLF has formed TerraForce, its own security outfit, trained by the Israeli army and the US marines, to patrol its properties. Infosys, the IT giant, and the country’s largest private-sector firm, Reliance Industries, have both been allotted permanent protection from India’s state Central Industrial Security Force (CISF), whose officers, unlike those in private security firms, are permitted to carry firearms.

Hiring private security is arguably necessary, given the evident failings of the Indian state security forces during the attacks. The police were armed with nothing but bamboo “lathis” or sticks when they had to face the militants. Members of the elite National Security Guard (NSG) took eight hours to travel from their base in the state of Haryana to the hotels, and then it took two more days to defeat the 10 gunmen.

At the time, the Indian government declared it would reorganise security forces to prevent a recurrence of such a failure. But plans to post NSG teams in Mumbai, Kolkata, Hyderabad and Chennai, the four likeliest terrorism targets, have been delayed. The contractor building accommodation for the NSG personnel says that even pre-fabricated temporary barracks will not be ready in Mumbai by the deadline next month, while the proper facilities will now only be completed by 2011.

“The government machinery has moved in, but there’s a lot of red tape-ism and bureaucracy, so it’s moving slow,” says Mr Sudan.“It is not that the threat is not there, or that things have changed.”Story here.

5 Comments

  1. As is the case with Indian politics, we need to experience a major catastrophe and only then the right questions get asked. I am from India and was present during the 93 Bombay bombings. Not much was done to curb the terrorist activities or their spread thereafter. I mean we dont even have a SWAT team at all within the police. This is after the fact that local gang lords with the help from across the border blasted off multiple bombs within one day. Patience is not a virtue at all times, but then again thats who we are 🙂

    I must say i was happy to be brought up in a city that was not cought up in fear. REgards

    Comment by Pranav — Wednesday, November 25, 2009 @ 5:36 PM

  2. Pranav,

    Disregard my question I asked you in emails. I didn't know you posted a comment here too.

    Thank you for taking the time to comment about the situation in India. Do you have any information about TerraForce? That is the company that I am curious about, as is a few others out there. Cheers. -matt

    Comment by headjundi — Wednesday, November 25, 2009 @ 11:40 PM

  3. I have not head much, but terra force set up shop about 10 minutes away from my residence in gurgaon, haryana state. my suburb was first developed by the property group DLF who are the owners of terra force. terra force is also 20 min away from the NSG commandos home base in manaser, haryana 🙂 sure some joined them for vip protection

    from wht is see they are placing them selves to take advantage of the indian security market when it opens up more for managed security. currently they are providing std static , beat partoal , security risk mgmt , electronic etc. whts suprised me also was the inclusion of VIP services. normally NSG commandos were directly appointed to some top politician, sports celebrities and some movie stars ..

    kravmaga india has been moving fast to provide hand to hand combat, body guarding, defensive driving training to various private security companies in cordination with the national private security associations. they do get ex IDF to visit and hold many seminars. also in mumbai max security has opened which is also ex IDF so there perhaps are some training connections locally. however the parent company can easily afford to bring in consultants for a couple of days, no sweat.

    Comment by Pranav — Sunday, November 29, 2009 @ 4:41 PM

  4. Pranav,

    Thanks for the info. That is really interesting on how the Israelis are jumping on board with security opportunities in India. I am surprised there are not more American companies jumping in.

    Also, check out Jody Ray Bennett's article about India's security market if you are interested.

    https://feraljundi.com/2009/11/27/india-indias-pri

    Comment by headjundi — Sunday, November 29, 2009 @ 4:54 PM

  5. Matt, thanks for the link, was a good article by Jody. I still don't think the Security companies locally have evolved into the VIP , close protection services as yet. Well now that we are conducting more joint operations between the US and India perhaps the relationships will build on support systems as well.

    Comment by Pranav — Monday, November 30, 2009 @ 12:11 PM

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