Airport-style security measures for hotels proposed in Russia

MOSCOW, Russia – The Russian government is preparing a motion that would obligate hotels to introduce tighter security measures, including conducting luggage checks and installing CCTV cameras in room

MOSCOW, Russia – The Russian government is preparing a motion that would obligate hotels to introduce tighter security measures, including conducting luggage checks and installing CCTV cameras in rooms, a popular daily reported, quoting an unnamed source in the cabinet.

โ€œAlarm buttons will be installed on every floor, maybe even in every room. This is still being discussed. Surveillance cameras will be installed in the roomsโ€™ entrance areas. In general, the guestsโ€™ behavior will be put under scrupulous monitoring,โ€ Izvestia newspaper quoted its source as saying.


The government started to work on the motion because of the increasing terrorist threat that has become more evident in the wake of the growing number of attacks in foreign countries, such as the latest act of terrorism at Turkeyโ€™s Ataturk airport in Istanbul.

If the motion becomes law, hotels will be obligated to screen their guestsโ€™ luggage and install metal detectors at every entrance, as will other establishments offering accommodation services. The government has also proposed that a code of behavior be developed for clients to make the work of security personnel easier.

According to Izvestia, industry experts have not welcomed the idea in its current form.

The president of the Russian Hotel Association, Gennadiy Lamshin, said that his colleagues had seen the proposal and thought that it lacked concrete paragraphs establishing a chain of command and responsibilities. Moreover, implementing the governmentโ€™s plan would require significant investment from hotel owners, who would need to buy new equipment and hire additional staff, without offering any compensation or benefits in return.

Sergey Kolesnikov, director of one of Russiaโ€™s hotel management companies, believes that many hotels simply would not be able to afford to implement the proposed security measures. He added that, in his view, it would be better if anti-terrorist operations were conducted by specially trained security officers and not hotel staff.

News of the new motion came soon after the Russian parliament approved a controversial new package of anti-terrorist laws that include harsher punishments for international terrorists, while lowering the age threshold at which people can be prosecuted for extremist crimes. The new legislation would also require communications companies to keep records on all of their clientsโ€™ traffic and hand it over to Russiaโ€™s security services along with encryption keys. The bill has not yet been signed into law.



In November of last year, a group of leftist MPs proposed that the Russian government temporarily ban tourist travel to countries where Russian citizens might be at especially high risk of falling victim to a terror attack. This bill still hasnโ€™t been considered by the parliament, however.

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Linda Hohnholz

Editor in chief for eTurboNews based in the eTN HQ.

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