wiki globe

Posts Tagged ‘hotel’

More 5-star hotel beds left vacant

In Uncategorized on November 3, 2009 at 2:56 am




More 5-star hotel beds left vacant


QĐND – Monday, November 02, 2009, 20:24 (GMT+7)

Luxury hotels nationwide are still struggling to shift their focus with a view to increasing their occupancy rates in the remaining months of the year. 


In the first nine months of the year, the number of foreign tourists arriving in Vietnam dropped by 16 percent from the same period last year, according to the National Administration of Tourism. 


According to market research by CB Richard Ellis company, in 2008 five-star hotels in the capital had an average occupancy rate of 63 percent, while in the same period this year the rate had dropped to 55 percent. 


In HCM City, the average occupancy rate of five-star hotels in Q3 of 2008 was 58.9 percent and it dropped to 49.1 percent in 2009. 


The current situation is a marked contrast to 2007, when occupancy rates were as much as 70-80 per cent. 


In HCM City, the Rex Hotel saw an average occupancy rate of only 46 percent in the first nine months of the year, the Thoi bao Kinh te Sai Gon (Sai Gon Economic Times) reports.


Large hotels in HCM City centre have attributed the drop to the world recession and swine flu which has dramatically reduced the number of foreigners visiting the country.


The marketing director of the New World Hotel in HCM City, Nelson Balilo, said the number of visitors from the EU, US and Japan had sharply decreased. 


Hotels are increasingly shifting their focus onto Asian and domestic tourists. Big name hotels are reporting more Vietnamese coming to the hotels for lunch or dinner, and greater attention is being paid to attracting MICE tours (Meetings, Incentives, Conferences, Exhibitions) by giving special incentives.


To survive in this context, hotels must have active policies, said Tao Van Nghe, general director of the Majestic Hotel.


Source: VNA/VOVNews


Source: QDND Bookmark & Share

Suicide bike bomber kills 24 at Pakistan hotel

In Uncategorized on November 2, 2009 at 9:23 am

Pakistan, Nov 2, 2009 (AFP) – A suicide bomber targeted workers queuing for their salaries outside a Pakistan bank and hotel on Monday, killing 24 people as the United Nations pulled expatriate staff from the northwest.


The second bombing to kill ordinary civilians in less than a week, the attack near the army headquarters in the garrison city Rawalpindi, showed the enormity of the threat that Al-Qaeda-linked militants pose in Pakistan.








Pakistani policemen secure the site after a sucide bomb blast in Rawalpindi on November 2, 2009 (AFP photo)

The explosion outside a building housing a bank and the four-star Shalimar Hotel showered the area with human flesh, smearing blood on the ground and shattering windows, said witnesses.


“We were sitting on the second floor of our office. It was a huge blast,” Raja Sher Ali, a marketing manager in a local company, told AFP.


“Our building shook as if in an earthquake and when we came out there was smoke everywhere and body parts were thrown into our office,” she said.


A surge in bloodshed left more than 300 people dead last month as Pakistan presses a major offensive against the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) in the tribal belt, where US officials say Al-Qaeda are plotting attacks on the West.


A senior police official said the attack was the work of a suicide bomber.


“The suicide bomber came on a motorcycle and blew up close to people gathered to get salaries. We found parts of a suicide vest and some body parts of the suicide attacker,” senior police official Aslam Tarin told reporters.


Deeba Shehnaz, a rescue workers spokeswoman, told AFP from the site that “the death toll has risen to 24” with another 24 people wounded.


The attack off Mall Road was close to the upmarket Pearl Continental Hotel and near Pakistan’s army headquarters, where 10 gunmen kept up a nearly 24-hour siege last month that left 23 people dead and deeply embarrassed the military.


The plummeting security saw the United Nations announce Monday it was pulling out international staff from northwest Pakistan, just days at least 118 people were slaughtered in a car bomb in its capital Peshawar.


“They will be relocated. Immediately,” Ishrat Rizvi, a UN spokeswoman, told AFP, unable to say immediately how many staff the decision affected.


UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon declared the world body had raised the security level to “phase four” in the North West Frontier Province and the Federally Administered Tribal Areas, a UN statement said.


“The decision has been taken bearing in mind the intense security situation in the region,” the statement said.


Last month the UN’s World Food Programme closed distribution centres serving more than two million people in the northwest because of security fears.


Stepping up its assault on the Taliban, Pakistan on Monday offered rewards worth five million dollars for information leading to the capture, dead or alive, of the country’s Taliban warlord Hakimullah Mehsud and 18 lieutenants.


The rewards for the TTP’s top-tier warlords were offered in a black-and-white government advertisement on the front page of The News daily and flashed on Pakistani television channels overnight.


“The activities of these brutal people, who have no fear of God, are bringing a bad name — not only to the Mehsud tribe but all tribesmen… and also give a bad name to Pakistan in the whole world,” the advertisement said.


“These people certainly need just punishment. They are the killers of humanity. Help the government of Pakistan to annihilate them.”


Mehsud, who took on the leadership mantle after a US drone attack killed his predecessor Baitullah Mehsud in August, headed the list with 50 million Pakistan rupees (600,240 dollars) slapped on his head.


TTP has been blamed for some of the worst attacks in Pakistan, which have killed around 2,400 people in a deadly wave of carnage over the past two years.


Ground troops have been locked in street battles for two days with Taliban in Kanigurram, one of the largest towns in South Waziristan and described as a major operation centre for the militant umbrella group.


Although none of the details provided by the military can be verified because communication lines are down and journalists are barred from independent access to the area, commanders say 306 insurgents have been killed.


Source: SGGP Bookmark & Share

Blaze breaks out at Da Lat hotel

In Vietnam Society on October 27, 2009 at 8:51 am

The restaurant of the Golf 1 Hotel in the Central Highlands City of Da Lat caught fire on October 26, destroying the eatery and surrounding structures.











Firefighters struggle against flames at the Golf 1 Hotel in Da Lat City on October 26 (Photo: SGGP)
The fire was thought to be caused by a leaking gas tank.

 

Staff said the fire started in the kitchen and that only a few employees were in the restaurant at the time. No injuries were reported.

Five fire trucks and hundreds of firefighters and police were mobilized to put out the inferno and the blaze was under control within 30 minutes.


Source: SGGP Bookmark & Share

City hotel and apartment towers open

In Vietnam Business on September 11, 2009 at 7:46 am

HCM CITY — InterContinental Hotels Group (IHG) inaugurated the InterContinental Asiana Sai Gon hotel and InterContinental Asiana Sai Gon Residences in HCM City yesterday.


They are, the first international luxury hotels to open in the city in the last four years and the first residential property under the InterContinental brand in Asia Pacific.


The two towers are part of the South Korean-invested complex project Kumho Asiana Plaza, which is located on the downtown land lot bordering Le Duan, Hai Ba Trung, Nguyen Du and Le Van Huu streets in District 1.


The complex contains an up-market commercial, accommodation and shopping arcade, and several restaurants and bars – which will include the coming Hard Rock Cafe.


The hotel features 305 rooms and suites. It also has extensive meeting facilities, including eight meeting rooms and the largest Grand Ballroom in the downtown area, which can cater up to 600 persons, with indoor and outdoor pre-function spaces.


The hotel has a spa and a health club featuring a 20m outdoor swimming pool.


The hotel’s sister property of InterContinental Asiana Sai Gon Residences offers 260 fully furnished, serviced apartments for lease, ranging from one-bedroom at 78sq.m to three-bedroom at 204sq.m.


“Viet Nam has a huge potential as a destination for both business and leisure tourists from around the world and IHG is confident in the growth of InterContinental Asiana Sai Gon.” said Phil Riley, IHG Viet Nam Regional General Manager.


“We are also very positive about premium residential market in HCM City and confident that our service residences will meet the growing needs of discerning, long-term residents of our city. We believe in the strong growth of this market in the medium and long term,” he said.


Located in the heart of the city, the properties are within walking distance of all major tourist attractions including the Notre Dame Cathedral, commercial buildings such as the Metropolitan or Diamond Plaza, and downtown entertainment facilities.


IHG owns, manages, leases or franchises, through various subsidiaries, more than 4,200 hotels and more than 620,000 guest rooms in nearly 100 countries and territories around the world. It owns brands including InterContinental Hotels&Resorts, Hotel Indigo, Holiday Inn Hotels and Resorts, Holiday Inn Express and Candlewood Suites. —

Source: vietnamnews.vnagency.com.vn

Vietnamese national killed in Pakistan hotel blast

In Uncategorized on September 23, 2008 at 4:18 pm

– The Pakistani Interior Ministry said on September 21 that four foreigners, two Americans, a Czech and a Vietnamese national, were killed in the suicide truck bomb attack on the Marriott Hotel in Islamabad.

The suicide truck bomber struck at the hotel in the evening of September 20, killing at least 53 people and wounding more than 260, according to news agencies.

The hotel, a favorite spot for foreigners and the Pakistani elite, still smoldered from a fire that raged for hours after the previous day’s explosion.

The bombing came just hours after Pakistan’s President Asif Ali Zardari made his first address to Parliament, just over a kilometre away from the hotel.

No group immediately claimed responsibility for the blast, though suspicion fell on al-Qaida and the Pakistani Taliban.

The attack drew condemnations from around the world, including the United States, which has pressured Pakistan to do more to wipe out militant hide-outs on its side of the Afghan border.-