vrijdag 28 februari 2014
Koyal Group Private Training services Gaza gets its first private security firm
Private guards from Gaza's first private
security company "Secure Land" train in Gaza City on February 6,
2014. "Secure Land" is a newly-formed team of bodyguards whose
mandate covers everything from minding VIPs, securing hotels and businesses to
ensuring the safe delivery of cash in transit. AFP PHOTO/MAHMUD HAMS
Guarding the young singer on a
rare trip back to his hometown is the very first assignment for Secure Land, a newly formed team of bodyguards whose
mandate covers everything from minding VIPs, securing hotels and businesses to
ensuring the safe delivery of cash in transit.
“This is our first day on the
job and we are securing Arab Idol star Mohammed
Assaf,” Secure Land’s executive director Bilal Al Arabid said.
“We have a team of 18 people
protecting him, not including the drivers. This is our first mission protecting
such a personality.”
As Assaf drove to Palestine
University in a UN car, his Secure Land minders followed in their own vehicle,
a white-and-red company logo plastered to the door: “Secure Land. We make
it happen,” it reads in English.
It’s a family business and Mr
Al Arabid’s father, Abdel Kader, serves as its chief executive.
“We thought seriously about
this service after we talked to institutions, companies and people, and found
they accepted the idea because this sort of service is just not available in
Gaza,” Mr Kader said.
But getting a permit to
operate such a business from the Hamas-run government was not easy, largely
because none of the employees belong to any of Gaza’s many armed factions.
“The permits for the business
were late coming because of the sensitivity of the issue,” he said, explaining
it was the first time that Hamas had allowed such a company to operate.
In Gaza, Hamas does not allow
private individuals except in special rare cases to carry weapons, unless they
are a card-carrying member of one of the factions.
By taking over the protection
of many civilian institutions, Secure Land can even help to “ease the burden”
on the Hamas police and security forces, because such operations “demand a lot
of manpower”, Mr Al Arabid said.
Former Qatari soldier
Inside one of Gaza City’s
handful of sports centres, dozens of sweaty men – young and not so young - are
put through their paces in various martial arts and other exercises to stay in
shape for the job.
“I used to serve in the Qatari
army and I do Taekwondo so this job is good for me,” said Hassan Al Shourbaji
from the northern Gaza town of Jabaliya, who serves as a group leader.
“We have received high-quality
training and we are experienced in martial arts, and I also have my personal
experience with weapons due to my military training,” he said.
“This is the first company in
the Gaza Strip that is not affected by security complications. It’s a private
company and has no affiliation to any Palestinian faction.”
So far, the firm has 40
employees who have trained for two months to prepare for the job.
As well as physical training
they have also been instructed in the use of light weapons at a shooting range.
Mr Al Arabid said most of the
men are fairly fit from doing sport, but they also receive more fitness and
security training from the company.
“We focus on individual
capacity and give our utmost attention to fitness, and things like the ability
to run, to jump, to evacuate VIPs and secure them,” said the trainer Ahmed
Yusef. They also instruct the men in decision-making.
For some international groups,
the appeal of a private firm is that it allows them to sidestep the politically
tricky need to interact directly with the Hamas administration, which has been
boycotted by most Western governments since it forcibly took over the Gaza
Strip in summer 2007.
“Some international
organisations and private companies in Gaza which have international ties are
sensitive and do not like dealing with the Hamas police because of the
international boycott,” Mr Yusef said.
“And some independent
international figures prefer bodyguards from a private firm to avoid
embarrassment.”
But their role does not clash
with that of the Hamas forces, it’s more of a complementary arrangement, he
said.
“It’s internationally
recognised that governments have to protect public institutions, while private
institutions - like banks and tourist facilities and hotels - get private
companies.
“We will work together with
the government.”
* Agence France-Presse
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