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Elite firm
to guard top-secret meeting in Kanata
VIPs
set to arrive for Bilderberg meeting
The Ottowa Citizen | June 8, 2006
By
Andrew Seymour and Andrew Mayeda,
with a file from James Bagnall
An elite
private security firm has been hired to guard a top-secret meeting
of some of the world's most powerful business and political leaders
at a Kanata hotel starting today.
Members of the
Bilderberg Group will descend on the upscale Brookstreet Hotel for
the three-day meeting, several police sources confirmed yesterday.
At least four
off-duty Ottawa police officers will be part of the security for the
event.
The highly
secretive session, expected to touch on global issues such as the
direction of oil markets and potential military action against Iran,
will run through Sunday.
Senior Ottawa
police officers met yesterday afternoon to discuss preparations for
the event, which police are concerned may draw the attention of
anti-globalization protesters as well as present a potential
security risk as a collection of the world's richest and most
influential people gather under one roof.
When asked
about police plans for the event, a police spokeswoman referred the
Citizen to Alan Bell of Globe Risk Holdings.
Reached by
phone, Mr. Bell -- who is listed as president of Globe Risk Holdings
in Toronto and a former SAS paratrooper commando -- said he hadn't
heard of the Bilderberg Group and denied that his firm has been
hired to guard this week's conference.
"Never heard
of that conference. What is it? What do they do?" said Mr. Bell
before politely cutting the conservation short.
But according
to the company's website, Globe Risk Holdings specializes in
"strategic planning and counter-measures," recruits its consultants
primarily from elite military counter-terrorist and special forces
units, and has "undertaken consultancy and project work worldwide in
areas of high risk" including Africa, Central and South America and
Asia.
"The
consultants at Globe Risk Holdings have proven backgrounds in
military, special forces, law enforcement and government
organizations with real life expertise in the areas of international
security, mining, energy exploration security, counter-terrorism,
kidnapping, specialized training, close protection, sabotage
prevention, and military/law enforcement," reads the company
website. "Knowledgeable and discreet, our consultants work together
as a team to offer the quality of service necessary to meet all our
clients' needs."
It's not known
if any current heads of state are expected to attend the meeting.
Prime Minister
Stephen Harper has been linked to the group after attending a
Bilderberg conference in Versailles, France in 2003. A spokeswoman
for the prime minister said yesterday he would not be attending the
conference and that officials at the Prime Minister's Office weren't
aware of the event.
The Bilderberg
Group is named after the Dutch hotel where it held its first meeting
in 1954. Since then, the group has met annually in various locations
throughout North America and Europe, including Toronto in 1996 and
the Chateau Montebello in Quebec in 1983.
The list of
attendees at last year's conference in Germany is believed to have
included the queens of Spain and the Netherlands, former U.S.
secretary of defence Henry Kissinger, World Bank president Paul
Wolfowitz, as well as top executives and directors at such
multinational corporations as BP PLC, Siemens AG, Deutsche Bank
Group and DaimlerChrysler AG.
Canadian
attendees are believed to have included Robert Pritchard, chief
executive of TorStar Corp., and Heather Reisman, chief executive of
Indigo Books and Music Inc.
The group was
originally conceived as a forum for bridging the political and
economic divide between Europe and the United States during the Cold
War. But in recent years the group has taken on a mystique, perhaps
due to the secretive nature of the meetings.
The group has
no website, and attendees promise not to disclose the subject of the
talks. Even newspaper and magazine editors and media executives who
attend the event are sworn to secrecy.
Bilderberg
insiders say the approach enables participants to discuss political
and economic issues without worrying how their opinions will be spun
by the media. But it has also made the group a prime target for
critics and conspiracy theorists who say its members come to
important decisions about global public policy behind closed doors.
Whatever the
case, Brookstreet staff are staying tight lipped about the
conference. The hotel's general manager, Patrice Basille, didn't
immediately return a call yesterday. He has previously said he was
unaware of the event.
A Citizen
reporter who called to make dinner reservations was told the hotel
will be closed between June 8 and 11 to accommodate a private
function.
- - -
A Memorable
Evening With the Bilderbergers
They were
welcomed by an exquisite array of cakes bearing the flags of the
world. In the evening, they dined on venison -- or was it quail? --
but only after the Bilderberg tasters made sure nothing was amiss
with the sauce.
It has been
more than two decades since one of the most powerful and exclusive
clubs in the world held its annual meeting close to Canada's
national capital.
But if this
weekend's conference at the Brookstreet Hotel is anything like the
meeting at the Chateau Montebello in Quebec in May 1983, it will be
a closely choreographed affair swathed in luxury -- and a discreet
but omnipresent layer of security.
Today, Jacques
Ternois is director of hotel operations at charter airline Air
Transat. But when the Bilderberg Group met in Montebello, about 30
kilometres east of Ottawa, he was in charge of food and beverage
operations at the resort.
Mr. Ternois
doesn't remember the exact menu served to the Bilderbergers, but he
does remember the security guards stationed at the kitchen doors,
the background checks that his staff had to undergo, and the food
"consultants" brought in to oversee the meal.
Nevertheless,
Mr. Ternois said the extra precautions weren't intrusive and the
conference went off smoothly.
"I wouldn't
say it was secretive. I would say low key," he said. "They were very
simple in their demands."
Mr. Ternois
said attendees came and went at various times throughout the
conference due to their tight schedules. He couldn't recall all the
names on the guest list -- after all, he was working -- or what they
discussed.
"If I'm not
wrong, I think (Henry) Kissinger was there," he said. "There were
several heads of state or close to that."
Critics and
conspiracy theorists find the group's clandestine ways disturbing.
They accuse the group of seeking to depose political leaders and set
global oil policy.
But Bilderberg
insiders insist the reality is far less sinister.
"I don't think
(we are) a global ruling class because I don't think a global ruling
class exists," Bilderberg chairman Etienne Davignon told the BBC
last year. "It's people who have influence interested to speak to
other people who have influence."
Mr. Ternois,
for his part, says the Bilderberg conference was one of the most
prestigious events with which he has ever been associated. He still
keeps a photo at home of resort staff and some of the attendees.
"It has a
special place in my heart," he said.
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