Egypt clashes spill into Cairo hotel
2013-01-30 11:57
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Cairo - Looters broke into a Nile-side luxury hotel in the
Egyptian capital early on Tuesday, taking advantage of clashes in the streets
outside to trash shops and the lobby before police and demonstrators alerted
via social media drove them out, a hotel spokesperson said.
The break in, which happened despite the presence of
hundreds of riot police nearby, cast another cloud over Egypt's flagging
tourism industry. Once a key source of foreign revenue, tourism has been hard
hit by waves of political turmoil and street violence that have dogged the
country since the uprising that toppled long-time autocrat Hosni Mubarak in
2011.
Egypt's latest unrest erupted around Friday's second
anniversary of the revolt, and the Semiramis InterContinental, which overlooks
Cairo's landmark Tahrir Square, has been on front line of clashes between riot
police and rock-throwing youths since then.
At about 02:00 on Tuesday, dozens of people forced their way
into the hotel, sacking stores inside its shopping plaza and smashing glass and
furniture in the lobby.
"Looters had tried several times to break in over the
past two days, but when protesters beat back police on Monday night they
operated with impunity," said Nabila Samak, a spokesperson for the hotel.
When appeals to police failed to end the incursion, Samak
said she started contacting journalists and calling for help on social media.
"We r under attack and several thugs have entered the
Semiramis ... We need help," she wrote on the hotel's Twitter account in
the first of several pleas.
Help finally arrived in the form of security forces and
protesters, who drove the looters out about two hours after they broke in, she
said.
Fresh wave of unrest
On Tuesday, broken glass, fallen chandeliers, and papers lay
scattered across the lobby, and the sting of tear gas still hung in the air.
Workers wearing surgical masks swept up the debris as men welded steel plates
to block the main entrance to the hotel, which is now closed.
Security officials who declined to be named because they
were not authorized to brief reporters said police had foiled an attempted
robbery by 12 masked gunmen they suspect were criminals using the street
clashes as cover. AP television footage shows protesters trying to arrest some
of the thieves.
Once an opulent stomping ground for elites in the first half
of the 20th century, the Semiramis and neighbouring Shepheard Hotel have both
been rebuilt since and now rely heavily on foreign tourists.
Outside the Semiramis on Tuesday, riot police guarded the
main entrance but street battles showed no signs of abating as fire bombs and
tear gas canisters traced arcs in the sky. The nearby US Embassy suspended
public services.
The fresh wave of unrest roiling Egypt is likely to further
stifle tourism, which has traditionally been one of the country's main economic
pillars — along with revenues from fossil fuel sales and the Suez Canal.
From January through November 2012, 10.5 million tourists
brought some $9.37bn to Egypt, Tourism Minister Hesham Zazoua said in December,
when he expected total annual tourist numbers to reach 11.5 million. But
December figures, yet to be announced, will likely bear the impact of the
recent violence.
The numbers pale in comparison to pre-revolt levels. In
2010, 14.7 million tourists brought in at least $12bn in revenue.
- AP