Egypt Selects Global Risks to Review its Airports Security

24.12.2015 Security
Egypt Selects Global Risks to Review its Airports Security

Egypt Selects Global Risks to Review its Airports Security

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Egypt has hired global consultancy Control Risks to review security at its airports following the crash of a plane carrying Russian holidaymakers over the Sinai Peninsula, killing all on board and hurting the country's tourism industry.

Egypt said this month it had found no evidence so far of terrorism or other illegal action linked to the October crash, in which 224 people were killed, but Russia said in November that the plane was brought down by a bomb.

Islamic State, the militant group that has seized swathes of territory in Iraq and Syria, claimed responsibility and said it had smuggled a bomb on board hidden in a soft drinks can.

The crash hit Egypt's tourism sector hard, with some airlines suspending flights to Sharm El-Sheikh, the Red Sea resort from which the flight departed, pending security assurances.

The security review, announced at a news conference by Tourism Minister Hisham Zaazou, Civil Aviation Minister Hossam Kamal (photo) and Control Risks regional chief executive Andreas Carleton Smith, is part of an effort to restore confidence and revive tourism, a key foreign currency earner for cash-strapped Egypt.

“Ensuring safe and secure flights for everyone travelling to Egypt whether for business or pleasure, is a top priority of the Egyptian government. This is why we have taken immediate actions to ensure we possess a world-class, gold standard security,” Zaazou said.

Zaazou said London-based Control Risks would begin with assessments of security at Cairo and Sharm El-Sheikh, which receive high numbers of foreign travelers, but would also review security at other Egyptian airports.

The disaster has cost Egypt about 2.2 billion Egyptian pounds ($280.97 million) a month in direct losses and Zaazou told Reuters this month he sees this year's tourism receipts falling 10 percent on last year as a result.

Egypt earned about $7.2 billion in tourism revenues last year, still a far cry from around $12.5 billion before the 2011 uprising, which ushered in a period of political instability that scared away tourists and foreign investors.

The home of the Giza Pyramids and other Pharaonic wonders and pristine beaches had been working to restore confidence, and was about to launch a new tourism marketing campaign, when the Russian plane crash took place.

Kamal said the aviation sector alone contributes to 1.2% of gross domestic product.

Control Risks has operated in the Middle East and North Africa for 15 years and has offices in the United Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabia and Iraq.

Carleton-Smith, Regional Control Risks CEO, anticipated the reviews of both Cairo and Sharm al-Sheikh airports taking between two-and-a-half and three months.

 



 
 

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