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Hotel owner vows to increase security

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HONG KONG: The billionaire owner of the City of Dreams casino resort in Manila will increase security at his complex, he said on Friday, following the deaths of at least 36 people at the nearby Resorts World Manila.


A gunman burst into the Resorts World Manila, fired shots and set gaming tables alight in the early hours of Friday, sowing panic in a country already on high alert over a militant attack in the south.


“With an incident like this, especially at Resorts World Manila, we certainly would ratchet that (security) up even more... certainly an issue we will buckle down on,” Lawrence Ho, 40, who owns casinos in Manila and Macau, said in Hong Kong.


Ho’s City of Dreams Manila, operated through his company Melco Resorts, is located a few kilometres from the Resorts World Manila, owned by Travellers International Hotel Group Inc, a joint venture of the Philippines’ Alliance Global Group Inc and Genting Hong Kong Ltd.


Ho declined to say how he would increase security but said his casinos already make use of surveillance and counter intelligence measures, metal detectors and security guards.


“We get news about what happens around the region. Occasionally, there are instability within geopolitics in the Philippines and the Asean region, so we take it (security) very seriously,” he said.


The Philippines is one of the fastest-growing casino hubs in Asia after Macau and Singapore. The government wants to build a Las Vegas style strip in the middle of the capital.


But security is a major concern that deters big spending gamblers from China, who are wary of kidnapping and extortion incidents in the Philippines in recent years.


“When we first started five years ago, it was perceived very differently than what it is now,” said Ho, adding that growing ties between China and the Philippines at a national level was helping to drive visits and tourism.


Most Manila casinos and hotels have metal detectors at their entrances and they also typically check vehicles before allowing them access.


“It’s the fastest-growing gaming jurisdiction in the world. Growth rates in terms of (the) economy is phenomenal,” said Ho.


Meanwhile, the general leading an offensive against pro-IS militants holed up in a southern Philippine town has been relieved of his command, an army spokesman said on Friday, the 11th day of the country’s biggest security crisis in years.


The removal of Brigadier-General Nixon Fortes as commander of the army brigade in Marawi City and his replacement by his deputy, Colonel Generoso Ponio, was not related to the battle that has raged in the city, the spokesman said.


“That’s not the reason,” spokesman Lt-Colonel Ray Tiongson said when asked if Fortes’ replacement was triggered by the course of the conflict.


Fortes was appointed commander of the army’s 103rd Brigade in January and oversaw a series of operations on the island of Mindanao to disrupt the Maute, a group that has sworn allegiance to IS which later laid siege to Marawi City.


A military source, speaking on condition of anonymity, said Fortes was dismissed because not all his forces were in the city when the rebels began their rampage, even though military intelligence had indicated that militants, including foreign fighters, were amassing there. — Reuters


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