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World's most dangerous destinations

The globe's most perilous places — and what to do if you have to visit one

Image: Somalia
Somalia is a lawless land, according to iJet and Control Risks. Among the risks visitors take are military clashes, kidnappings-for-ransom, pirate attacks and landmines. Even aid agency workers have been attacked, and foreign personnel have been relocated.
Guy Calaf / AP file
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By Rebecca Ruiz
updated 2:12 p.m. ET Jan. 17, 2008

In the 1970s, a traveler's worst nightmare might have been a hijacked plane or hostage crisis. Today, the threats are equally perilous but reflect the changing times. Now, a tourist or business traveler might worry more about terrorist attacks on mass transit, getting caught in a spontaneous uprising or a bombing of a nightclub or hotel.

That's what happened Monday when militants attacked a luxury hotel in Kabul with grenades, AK-47 rifles and suicide vests, killing six people, including at least one American. In Kenya, disputed election results from late December led to weeks of widespread rioting and ethnic violence, which caused an estimated 600 deaths.

Escalating tensions in Pakistan and the Strait of Hormuz, where Iranian patrol boats recently confronted a Navy convoy, portend further global conflict as well.

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"I don't think the world is more safe or more dangerous," says Johan Selle, director of operations for iJet Intelligent Risk Systems, a Maryland-based risk consultancy agency. "I think that certain threats are more frequent now than they have been." According to Selle, these include suicide bombings, kidnappings and intellectual property theft.

Classifying which nations are the most dangerous based on the day's news can be somewhat deceiving. Of course, Iraq and Afghanistan are exceptionally treacherous, but other countries like Haiti, Somalia and the Democratic Republic of the Congo have remained as dangerous in the years since security conditions there began deteriorating.

In order to compile our annual list of the World's Most Dangerous Destinations, we conferred with two risk consultancies: iJet, and the London-based Control Risks. Both companies have offices worldwide and advise corporate, governmental and non-governmental clients about security risks in various countries. Their clients span industries to include pharmaceuticals, gas and oil, banks, and telecommunications.

IJet determines safety levels by assessing six factors: crime, security services, civil unrest, terrorism, kidnapping and geopolitical stability. Each country is then given a one to five ranking, with one as the lowest threat level and five as the highest. Control Risks uses a five-tiered risk rating, which determines whether security, terrorism or travel risks are extreme, high, medium, low or insignificant. Our list includes seven countries ranked as the most dangerous by iJet and Control Risks as well as three countries ranked high by one of the companies.

Destabilizing forces
Though factors that lead to destabilization or downright societal breakdown differ in each country, there are general trends that both companies have noticed in recent years.

"There is a lack of strong government and economy," says Selle of countries that have descended into chaos. "There's a lot of concern over Kenya right now, but a lot of economic interests and international interests are pushing to negotiate." Selle contrasts Kenya with Zimbabwe, which is "anything but an economic powerhouse."

Image: Iraq
Marko Drobnjakovic / AP file
 Though security has improved in various regions of this war-torn nation, both iJet and Control Risks believe that the failure to reconcile the various political parties means that the country will endure prolonged fighting and instability. According to Control Risks, the highest-risk areas include Baghdad and stretch from Tikrit in the north to Hillah in the south, and from Ramadi in the west to Mandali in the east.

IJet has ranked Zimbabwe as a five, noting prolonged civil unrest, a poor economy, financial risks for foreign companies and a failing government. Control Risks has rated the country as having a high security risk, insignificant terrorism risk and a medium travel risk. The U.S. Department of State has deemed Zimbabwe "volatile" and warns citizens that the government condones the use of force against dissenters.

Though African nations comprise just under half of the most dangerous countries on our list, James Smither, associate director of consulting projects at Control Risks, says that security is improving in some places across the continent.

"People are tiring of these conflicts," he says. "The number of civil wars has come down in recent years." Smither attributes improved security in some regions to the end of the Cold War, which caused a proliferation of conflict through proxy wars. "When that funding and interest in those conflicts ended, then those wars faded out." He points to Mozambique and Sierra Leone as examples of stabilization in recent years.


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