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Kidnap and Ransom Insurance to
the Rescue
By Heather Williams
insure.com
You're cruising the streets of Mexico City in the
company car, feeling good about your trip across the border: A
week to explore exotic night spots, soak up some sun, and do a
little work. You pull up to a red light, idling for a minute.
Startled by a knock on the window, you turn to find two men, two
guns, and two options: let them in, or . . . let them in. If you're
lucky, the next step is waking up in a cold sweat. If you're not,
then you, your ATM card, and your wallet just succumbed to an
"express." That's "express kidnapping"
the latest trend among Mexican criminals, and one of many reasons
to look at kidnap and ransom insurance if your company sends employees
abroad.
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Kidnap & ransom policies
A typical K&R policy
includes the following:
Kidnap
and ransom coverage: Pays ransom, and most policies
insure ransom money while it's in transit ("delivery
coverage"). Also includes payment of security company
fees
Extortion
coverage: Protection for threats against company property,
contamination of products, and computer systems
Expense
reimbursement: Includes travel expenses for security
consultants, family members, and the kidnapped employee.
Also covers the abductee's lost salary, and legal services.
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As more U.S. companies conduct global business,
entering countries that can be politically and economically unstable,
their employees face greater risk of abduction and extortion, among
other hazards. Kidnap and ransom policies ("K&R")
provide coverage in the event of a kidnapping. The policies cover
not only executives and employees, at home and overseas, but also,
in many cases, employees' families and guests staying in their house
or traveling with them are covered as well. Some policies even cover
consultants who are abducted or held for ransom while on a job site
for the company. A typical K&R policy covers all kidnap-related
costs, from ransom to travel expenses. Ransom money is also insured
during transit, until it's delivered. Other potential covered costs
include legal liability, fees for a professional negotiator, personal
accident insurance, and travel expenses. Some policies will cover
the expenses for a security consultant called in to investigate
a threat, even if no ransom payment is necessary or no one is kidnapped.
"When you have a disaster such as a kidnapping or extortion,
what you really need is instant help," says John Coonan, vice
president and deputy of US operations at Chubb Executive Risk. K&R
policies partner the insurer with a security company specializing
in international terrorism, which can finesse the delicate task
of negotiating with kidnappers. Chubb is aligned with Ackerman Group
of Miami, Fla., which is on-call 24 hours via a hotline that Chubb
customers can call to report a kidnapping. Within a day, representatives
of the firm will be on-site, working closely with the client to
ensure that all aspects of a kidnapping have been attended to. "The
biggest selling point of the coverage is that a specialist is available
to the insured," says Will Demers, manager of commercial risk
at Travelers Property Casualty, which partners with the security
firm Control Risks Group of McLean, Va. Hearing that a colleague
or family member has been kidnapped spurs panic in most people;
the security firm acts as a neutral advisor who can not only guide
ransom negotiations, but also ensure that often-overlooked details,
such as informing the press, are taken care of. Some security specialists
take over the negotiation; others prefer to devise strategies but
have them carried out by a family member or company representative,
fearing that the presence of a professional negotiator might anger
the kidnappers.
A Quiet Purchase
Policy limits vary, depending on the company's size and the riskiness
of its ventures abroad. Coonan estimates that a smaller company
with two or three overseas locations can buy $10 million in coverage
for between $2,000 and $5,000 per year in premiums. Large corporations
with as many as 50 overseas locations often purchase upward of $20
million in K&R coverage, costing $25,000 or more per year. Afraid
publicity will lead to fraudulent claims, or even actual kidnappings
if the existence of a policy is known, companies with K&R coverage
keep their purchase under wraps, so it's hard to guess how many
carry the coverage and how often it's put to use. Coonan speculates
that at least two-thirds of Fortune 1000 companies purchase K&R
coverage. "It's common coverage, and we pay out ransoms every
year," says Coonan. Insurance companies decline to discuss
many kidnapping details, citing client confidentiality. Coonan cites
two instances where K&R coverage proved a worthwhile investment:
A kidnapping in El Salvador where a medical-products company executive
was abducted and his driver killed. After eight weeks the executive
was released, only after his insurance company paid a $7 million
ransom. In Guatemala, a local businessman was abducted and released
after his K&R insurance paid $4 million in ransom. "Over
the years, it's been a profitable product for us," says Coonan,
"and it's not only the Fortune 100-type companies who are going
overseas."
Who needs it?
Do you really need this coverage? After all, it sounds a bit extreme.
Reading the materials accompanying a K&R policy can make you
feel like taking your next business trip down the street rather
than overseas. Says Demers of Travelers, "A lot of smaller
companies don't realize the exposures they face. You don't find
many companies without, say, fire insurance, but you do see a lot
who never buy kidnap and ransom insurance." Coonan agrees,
saying, "It's a real world threat." Colombia leads the
world in kidnappings. Colombian kidnappings are generally well-planned,
professional jobs, often involving extensive research on the company,
surveillance of the kidnapping target, and high ransom demands.
In a widely publicized 1998 abduction, the FARC (Revolutionary Armed
Forces of Colombia, a Marxist rebel group) kidnapped Canadian mining
company employee Ed Leonard, then traded him for Norbert Reinhardt,
a company executive who felt compelled to take Leonard's place.
Reinhardt, who did not know Leonard, was eventually released in
exchange for $170,000 in ransom. (No word on whether an insurance
company was involved in the negotiations.)
Top 10 countries in total
kidnappings, 1999
Source: Control Risks Group
Brazil
Colombia
Former
Soviet Union
India
Mexico
Nigeria
Philippines
Russia
Venezuela
Yemen
These results
are based on kidnappings Control Risks Group has
confirmed and about which it has gathered information.
They may not represent the full extent of the problem.
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Then there's the Mexican kidnapping threat. While
Colombian kidnappings are highly organized crimes, Mexico is notorious
for "express kidnappings," where assailants wait roadside
until a likely victim namely, one in a new, fancy car
drives up. The victims are forced out of the cars, sometimes violently,
and taken to ATM machines. They are forced to withdraw money, then
set free. Coonan argues that in the increasingly global economy,
it's small businesses who can benefit most from kidnap and ransom
insurance. "Larger companies have huge risk-management teams
and are generally much more savvy about using security consultants,
knowing what their exposure is. They take as many protective measures
as they can," Coonan says. For instance, using a security consultant
and internal research, a large company can track the movements of
the FARC, avoiding Colombia at times when the rebel group seems
likely to strike. "A fair number of smaller companies, say
one that's just exploring the Colombian landscape, won't be as aware
of what the risk is," Coonan explains. All this can make you
think a kidnapper lurks outside every hotel in every city outside
the US But according to Victor Ferreira of Control Risks Group,
90 percent of abductions are preventable, and you'll be much safer
following the advice of your security consultant in planning your
trip. The Ackerman Group distributes pamphlets to K&R clients
offering some hints on how to avoid trouble:
- Maintain a low profile Don't
become the stereotypical "ugly American," and don't
discuss your travel plans with strangers
- Vary your routine If someone
is watching you to figure out when you're most vulnerable, leaving
the hotel at different times and taking different routes around
the city can throw them off
- Never take a taxi service that isn't
approved by your security company. If you're not sure, take
a franchised cab instead of an independent one. Gypsy cabs in
particular can whisk jet-lagged travelers from the airport straight
to the house of a kidnapper.
And if you do have a problem, Ferreira offers
Control Risks Group's top tips for abductees:
- Don't resist your attackers
- Try to befriend the kidnappers,
not for escape purposes (don't try it!) but to make the atmosphere
more bearable
- Try to keep a routine of exercise,
reading, writing, or whatever you can do to make the time pass
- Above all, don't give up hope
remember that a large team of co-workers, family members, and
security specialists is working for your release.
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