Gulf News

Islamabad hotel a symbol of resilience

Ten years after terrorist attack, Marriott Islamabad has regained its prestige

- BY JUMANA AL TAMIMI Associate Editor

Nothing attracts attention in the lobby of Islamabad’s Marriott Hotel like the 1922 dark-coloured RollsRoyce decorating the entrance of the building.

There is nothing that appears unusual. No sign of fire damage.

Nothing is there that brings back the memory of what happened at the hotel 10 years ago.

The hotel seems like any five-star establishm­ent in the world: elegant interior designs, big chandelier­s dangling from the ceiling and a smiling and profession­al member of staff wherever the eye looks.

Giant paintings decorate the walls, mainly in the hotel’s different restaurant­s.

However, massive security measures have been taken outside the hotel. Barriers and steel gates are erected around the building.

Such fortificat­ion may be normal in a country that has fought a fierce war against terrorism for several years.

Back on the eve of September 20, 2008, terrorists attempted to ram a truck loaded with 600 kilogramme­s of explosives through the gate barrier of the Marriott Islamabad.

The vehicle could not make it through the barrier and exploded. The blast killed 53 people, mainly Pakistanis, and injured 266 others.

The explosion left a crater 20 metres wide and 8 metres deep.

Some reports said the sound of the explosion was heard 15 kilometres away from the hotel, which is located in a fashionabl­e neighbourh­ood, surrounded by government buildings and diplomatic missions.

A few months later, the Pakistani government reconstruc­ted the Islamabad Marriott and it was officially reopened on December 28, 2008.

Marriott Islamabad is a franchise hotel owned and operated by Hashwani hotels, a prominent Pakistani company in the hospitalit­y field, which is also running other luxury hotels in other Pakistani cities.

Today the hotel is the most prestigiou­s hotel in Islamabad.

Foreigners and Pakistanis throng the hotel either as guests or when celebratin­g special occasions.

Paying a high price

53

killed in 2008 terrorist attack on Marriott Hotel in Islamabad

600kg

weight of explosives loaded on truck used in the assault

According to reports, the man who was believed to be responsibl­e for that attack was a senior Al Qaida leader, Qari Yasin.

He was killed in a US drone attack on March 2017 in Afghanista­n.

Pakistan, officials and analysts say, has paid a high price for its war on terrorism — the lives of 6,000 soldiers and 23,000 civilians, along with $123 billion (Dh451 billion) of economic losses in the war to curb terrorism in the country.

 ?? AFP ?? NOW Smoke and flames billow from the burning Marriott Hotel in Islamabad after a powerful bomb blast on September 20, 2008.
AFP NOW Smoke and flames billow from the burning Marriott Hotel in Islamabad after a powerful bomb blast on September 20, 2008.
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THEN
 ?? Jumana Al Tamimi/Gulf News ?? The Rolls-Royce in the lobby of the Marriott Hotel in Islamabad.
Jumana Al Tamimi/Gulf News The Rolls-Royce in the lobby of the Marriott Hotel in Islamabad.

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