Travel Safety Information
Personal
Security Guidelines for Overseas Travel
State
Department Student Travel Information
State Department Web Site
Introduction
Effective security precautions require a continuous and conscious awareness of
one’s environment as well as the need to exercise prudence, judgment, and common
sense. This is especially true where the traveler must adapt to new cultures,
customs and laws.
Travel
Preparation
Travel Itinerary
In the current international climate, it is best not to
publicize your travel plans, but limit that knowledge to those who need to know.
Leave a complete itinerary (including contact numbers, if known) with your
office and with family or a friend.
Passport
- Make 2 copies of the page containing your photograph:
- Leave one with office or family
- Carry the other with you in a separate place from
your passport
Visas
·
Current/appropriate Visa(s) (tourist/business)
·
Visa application information must be accurate. False information
may be grounds for incarceration.
Documents
- Take only the credit cards you need.
- Carry only the documents you will need in a wallet or
purse.
- Realize all business documents might be subject to
search, seizure, or copying.
- Carry a U.S. driver’s license with your photo on it.
- Make two copies of the numbers of credit cards and
traveler’s checks, and telephone numbers to report loss, and air ticket
numbers and store in you wallet or briefcase. (These items should be stored
in separate locations to preclude loss of all the information).
Health
- Carry a copy of prescriptions and an ample supply of
any prescription medications, in original containers if possible.
- Bring an extra set of eyeglasses or contact lenses.
Carrying your prescription with you will expedite the procurement of
replacements.
- Carry an international shot record that certifies
appropriate inoculations.
- List with your blood type, allergies, medical
conditions and special requirements. (Medical alert bracelets are a good
idea).
·
Keep your personal affairs up-to-date. Have an up-to-date will and
insurance policy. Leave a power of attorney with a family member or friend
should anything happen to you.
·
While traveling, eat moderately and drink plenty of water to avoid
dehydration.
·
If possible, before you travel, make an effort to adjust your
sleep patterns.
·
Sleep as much as possible during the flight.
·
Carry air sickness medications with you. Even the best traveler
sometimes experiences air sickness.
·
Avoid a demanding schedule upon arrival. Give yourself a chance to
adjust to your surroundings.
Sources of Information
- Travel Security Information is available on the
IUPUI Police web site http://www.police.iupui.edu
- Check with the U.S. Department Of State Hotline for
American Travelers:
Calling within the U.S. (888) 407-4747
Calling outside of the U.S. (202) 501-4444
- Talk with people who have visited the country recently
or reliable in country persons
- Use airlines, hotels, and car rental companies that
are recommended by your travel agent.
- If renting a car, you may need an international
driver’s permit for the country you plan to visit?
- Items of value, such as cameras and laptop computers,
can be registered with Customs before departing the United States.
- The embassy of the country you plan to visit can
provide a list or pamphlet describing customs restrictions or banned
materials. (Minimize the possibility of an encounter with the local
authorities).
Luggage
- Hand carry sensitive information.
- Be sure that your luggage is tagged with covered tags.
- Do not use a business card as a luggage tag.
- Put you name and business address inside each piece of
luggage and be sure it is secured.
- The locks on your luggage are not secure. For added
security, run a strip of nylon filament tape around the suitcase.
- On luggage, use your business address and telephone
number.
- Check with the airline and your personal insurance
company regarding coverage for lost luggage.
- Use sturdy luggage and do not over pack.
- Expensive luggage or that which looks expensive should
not be carried.
- Do not transport items for other people. Any gifts
received from a foreign business contact should be thoroughly inspected
before being placed in your luggage. If you are asked by airline personnel
if you are carrying gifts or other items, respond affirmatively and allow
the item to undergo security inspection.
- Leave all expensive and heirloom jewelry at home.
- Never leave your bags unattended. Be especially alert
to luggage thieves who target airline and railway terminals as well as car
rental agency counter areas.
- If available, obtain a modest amount of foreign
currency before you leave home. (Criminals may watch for and target
international travelers purchasing large amounts of foreign currency at
airport banks and currency exchange windows).
Transportation Hub
Security
To diminish the risks of becoming a victim of a terrorist
attack and reduce your exposure to the criminal threat, remember the following
when checking into a transportation hub:
·
Always be aware of where you are in relation to exits. If an
incident occurs, you need to know how to avoid it and get out of the area.
·
Check in early; avoid last minute dashes to the airport.
·
Go directly to the gate or secure area after checking your
luggage.
·
Avoid waiting rooms and shopping areas outside the secure area.
·
At many airports, security personnel will ask you questions about
your luggage. Know what items you are carrying and be able to describe all
electrical items.
·
Do not exchange items between bags while waiting for security
screening or immigration or customs processing.
·
Cooperate if a conflict should arise while undergoing the
screening process. Discuss the matter with a supervisor from the appropriate air
carrier afterwards.
·
Arrange to be met upon your arrival whenever possible.
·
In some high risk areas, it is essential that you prearrange your
airport pickup. Otherwise, Do Not leave the airport. If uncertain,
contact your travel representative.
·
Alternately, consider transportation to and from the airport by a
hotel vehicle.
·
Declare all currency and negotiable instruments as required by
law.
·
NEVER leave your luggage or briefcase unattended at
anytime.
·
Dress casually when traveling to avoid attention.
·
Always reconfirm onward flights at least 72 hours in advance.
·
DO NOT accept or deliver letters, packages, or anything
else from anyone unknown to you. It could result in your being arrested for
illegally exporting a prohibited item.
Hotel
Security
Use hotels recommended by your travel agency, where
possible.
Reservations
- Make your OWN reservations when practical and
consistent with IUPUI policies. (The fewer people who become involved in
your travel and lodging arrangements, the better).
- If traveling abroad, especially in high threat areas,
consider making reservations using your business street address, without
identifying your place of employment, and using your personal credit card.
Again, the less known about your travel itinerary, and who you represent,
the better.
- If arriving in mid afternoon, ensure that reservations
are guaranteed.
- Request information about hotel parking arrangements
before renting an automobile.
- If possible, select a hotel that uses electronic
access cards as room keys.
- Be aware that credit card information may be
compromised by hotel, rental car, and restaurants. Always audit
monthly credit card statements to ensure that unauthorized use has
not been made of your account.
- Join frequent travelers’ programs. They are available
with many lodging companies. These programs enable upgrades to executive or
concierge floors where security is generally better.
Arriving Or Departing
From the Hotel
The most vulnerable part of your journey is traveling
between the point of debarkation and embarkation and the hotel.
- Disembark as close to a hotel entrance as possible and
in a lighted area. Before exiting the vehicle, ensure there are no
suspicious persons or activities.
- Do not linger or wander unnecessarily in the parking
lot, indoor garage, or the public space around hotel.
- Parking garages are difficult to secure. Avoid dimly
lit garages that are not patrolled and do not have security telephones or
intercoms.
- Watch for distractions that may be staged to set up a
pickpocket, luggage theft, or purse snatch.
- Stay with your luggage until it is brought into the
lobby or placed in your taxi.
- Use the bellman. Luggage in the “care, custody, and
control” of the hotel causes the hotel to be liable for your property. Keep
claim checks – they are your evidence!
- Due to hotel liability limits, personal travel
documents, laptop computers, valuables, and sensitive documents should be
hand carried and personally protected.
- Valets should receive only the ignition key.
- Women travelers should consider requesting an escort
to their vehicles.
Check-In
- In some countries, your passport may be held by the
hotel for review by the police or other authorities. If so, retrieve it at
the earliest possible time.
- Position luggage against your leg during registration,
but place a briefcase or purse on the desk or counter in front of you.
- Request a room between the second and seventh floor.
Most fire departments do not have the capability to rescue people above the
seventh floor level with external rescue equipment (i.e. ladders).
- Avoid low-level rooms with sliding glass doors and
easy window access. Depending upon the situation, area, and security
coverage, exercise a higher level of security if assigned a ground-level
room.
- Request rooms that are away from the elevator landing
and stairwells. This is to avoid being caught by surprise by persons exiting
the elevator with you or hiding in the stairwell.
- Accept the bellman’s assistance upon check-in. Allow
the bellman to open the room’s door, turn the lights on, and check the room
to ensure that it is vacant and ready for your stay.
- Inquire how guests are notified if there is an
emergency.
- Find the two nearest fire stairwells.
- Note the location of fire alarms, extinguishers, and
hoses, and read any fire safety information available in your room.
- Check outside your room window to ascertain if there
is a possible escape route that would be feasible in an extreme emergency.
- Find the nearest house telephone in case of an
emergency.
- Note how hotel staff are uniformed and identified.
Verify hotel employees with the front desk before permitting entry to your
room.
- While in the room, keep the door closed and engage the
deadbolt and privacy latch or chain. A limited number of hotel emergency
keys can override the deadbolt locks.
- Guests should always place money or valuables in the
safe deposit box at the front desk of the hotel. Guest room safes are not
secure.
- Stay only at hotels that have smoke detectors and/or
sprinklers installed in all rooms and provide information about fire and
safety procedures.
In Case of a Fire
KEEP CALM – DO NOT PANIC.
- Call the front desk and notify them of the location of
the fire.
- Check your door by placing your palm on the door and
then on the door knob. If either feels hot,
DO NOT OPEN THE DOOR.
- If it is safe to exit from your room, head for the
stairs.
TAKE YOUR ROOM KEY WITH YOU; YOU MAY HAVE TO RETURN TO
YOUR ROOM.
- If the corridor is full of smoke, crawl to the exit
and again check the door before opening it to see if it is hot. The fire
could be in the stairwell.
- DO NOT USE THE ELEVATOR!
- If you cannot leave your room or the stairwells are
unsafe and you must return to your room, notify the front desk that you are
in your room awaiting rescue.
- Open a window for fresh air. Do not break the window
as you may need to close it again if smoke starts to enter from the outside.
- Fill the tub and sink with water. Soak towels and
blankets as necessary to block vents and openings around doors to keep the
smoke and fumes out.
- Attempt to keep the walls, doors, and towels covering
vents and cracks cool and wet.
- A wet towel swung round the room will help clear the
room of smoke.
- Cover your mouth and nose with a wet cloth.
- Stay low, but alert to any signs of rescue from the
street or the halls. Let firefighters know where you are by waving a towel
or sheet out the window.
PERSONAL SECURITY IN A
FOREIGN COUNTRY
- All hotel rooms and telephones are not bugged;
however, your business purpose will be more secure if you act as if they
are.
- Keep your hotel room key with you at all times, if
possible.
- At night, secure your passport and other valuables.
- Do not divulge the name of your hotel or room number
to strangers.
Street Smart
- Invest in a good map of the city. Note significant
points on the map such as your hotel, embassies, and police stations. Make a
mental note of alternative routes to your hotel or local office should your
map become lost or stolen.
- Be aware of your surroundings. Look up and down the
street before exiting a building.
- Learn how to place a local telephone call and how to
use coin telephones. Make sure you always have extra tokens or coins for
telephone use.
- Areas around public telephones are often used by
criminals to stage pickpocket activity or theft. Keep briefcases and purses
in view or “in touch” while using phones. Caution is urged in safeguarding
telephone credit card numbers. Criminals wait for callers to announce credit
card numbers on public phones and then sell the numbers for unauthorized
use.
- Avoid jogging or walking in cities you are not
familiar with. If you must jog, be aware of the traffic patterns when
crossing public streets. (Joggers have been seriously injured by failing to
understand local traffic conditions).
- Speak with the bellman, concierge, and front desk
regarding safe areas around the city to jog, dine, or sight see. Ask about
local customs and which taxi companies to use or avoid.
- Avoid renting vehicles or driving unless you are
familiar with the local traffic laws and customs.
- Valuables should normally be left at home. The rule of
thumb is if you neither want nor can afford to lose them DO NOT TAKE
THEM! However, if you must carry valuables, the best way to protect
them is to secure them in your local offices. Second best is the hotel safe.
- Keep your passport with you at all times. Only
relinquish it to the hotel if required by law when registering, or if you
are required to identify yourself to local authorities for any reason.
- Vary the time and route by which you leave and return
to the hotel. Be alert for persons watching your movements.
- Be cautious when entering public restrooms.
- Purse snatchers and briefcase thieves are known to
work hotel bars and restaurants waiting for unknowing guests to drape these
items on chairs or under tables only to discover them missing as they are
departing. Keep items in view or “in touch”.
- Be alert to scams involving an unknown person spilling
a drink or food on your clothing. An accomplice may be preparing to steal
your wallet, purse, or briefcase.
- Pools or beaches are attractive areas for thieves.
Leave valuables in the hotel, but carry a token sum to placate violent
thieves. Sign for food and beverages on you room bill rather than carry
cash.
- Avoid persons you do not know. Prostitutes – both men
and woman- take advantage of travelers through various ploys; “knock out”
drugs, confederates, and theft from the victim’s room.
Workplace Security
- Safeguard all sensitive or proprietary papers and
documents; do not leave them lying around in the office or on top of a desk.
- Guard your conversations so that unauthorized
personnel are not able to eavesdrop on discussions pertaining to proprietary
information, personnel issues, or management planning or problems.
- Be careful of all communications. Be aware that the
monitoring of telephone, telegraph, and international mail is common in many
countries.
Personal Conduct
Hostile and even “friendly” intelligence organizations are
always on the lookout for sources that are vulnerable to coercion, addictions,
greed, or emotional manipulation. To eliminate, or at least reduce, the
possibility of inadvertently doing something that would bring your activities to
the special attention of one of these agencies:
- Do not do anything that might be misconstrued, reflect
poorly on your personal judgment, or be embarrassing to you or the
University.
- Conversations about religion and politics should be
avoided in many countries.
- Do not gossip about character flaws, financial
problems, emotional relationships, or the marital difficulties of anyone
working for the University, including yourself.
- Do not carry, use, or purchase any narcotics,
marijuana, or other abused drugs. Some countries have very stringent laws
covering the import or use of medications and other substances. If you are
using a prescribed medication that contains any narcotic substance or other
medication that is subject to abuse, such as amphetamines or tranquilizers,
carry a copy of the doctor’s prescription for all medications and check
local restrictions and requirements prior to departure. Some countries may
require additional documentation or certification from your doctor.
- Do not let a friendly ambiance and alcohol override
your good sense and capacity when it comes to social drinking.
- Do not engage in black-market activities such as the
illegal exchange of currency or the purchase of religious icons or other
antiquities.
- Do not carry any political or religious tracts or
brochures or publications likely to be offensive in the host country, such
as pornography or radical magazines.
- Do not photograph anything that appears to be
associated with the military or internal security of the country, including
airports, ports, or restricted areas such as military installations,
antennae, or government buildings.
- Do not purchase items that are illegal to import into
the United States or other countries such as endangered species or
agricultural products.
Arrested!
What Do I
Do Now?
Foreign police and intelligence agencies detain persons for
a myriad of reasons or for no other reason than suspicion or curiosity. The best
advice is to exercise good judgment, be professional in your demeanor, and
remember these suggestions.
- Ask to contact the nearest embassy or consulate
representing your country. As a citizen of another country, you have this
right, but that does not mean that your hosts will allow you to do so right
away. Continue to make the request periodically until they accede and let
you contact your embassy or consulate.
- Stay calm, maintain your dignity, and do not provoke
the arresting officer(s).
- Sign nothing. Often, part of the detention procedure
is to ask or tell the detained to sign a written report. Decline politely
until such time as the document is examined by an attorney or an embassy or
consulate representative.
- Accept no one at face value. When the representative
from the embassy or consulate arrives, request some identification before
discussing your situation.
- Do not fall for the ruse of helping those detaining
you in return for your release. They can be very imaginative in their
proposals on how you can be of assistance to them. Do not sell yourself out
by agreeing to anything. If there appears to be no other way out, tell them
that you will think it over and let them know. Once out of their hands,
contact the affiliate or your embassy for assistance in getting out of the
country.
Targeting Recognition
Persons traveling abroad on business should be aware that
they could be targeted by an intelligence agency, security service, terrorists,
criminals, or a competitor if they are knowledgeable of, or carrying, sensitive
or proprietary information.
In the course of doing business abroad, there are
indicators that should be recognized as potential hazards and indicate
unwarranted interest in your activities:
- Repeated contacts with a local or third-country
national who is not involved in your business interests or the purpose of
your visit, but as a result of invitations to social or business functions,
appears at each function. This individual’s demeanor may indicate more than
just a passing interest in you and your business activities.
- A close social relationship with a representative of a
host government is often unavoidable for business reasons. Be cautious and
do not allow the relationship to develop any further than the business
level.
- Accidental encounters with an unknown local national
who strikes up a conversation and wants to:
-
Practice English or another language.
-
Talk about your country of origin or your employment.
-
Buy you a drink because he or she has taken a liking to you.
-
Talk to you about politics.
-
Use other excuses to begin a “friendly” relationship.
Surveillance Recognition
Foreign intelligence, security services, terrorists, and
criminals use surveillance for operational preparation prior to taking action.
- The main terrorist threat to a traveler is that of
being in the wrong place at the wrong time and becoming an inadvertent
victim of a terrorist act.
- Be observant and pay attention to your sixth sense. If
you get the funny feeling that something is not right or that you are being
watched, pay attention! Report your suspicions or any information to the
general manager of the local affiliate of your embassy or consulate just in
case something does occur.
- If you have reason to believe that you are under
surveillance, continue to act naturally.
- Do not try to slip away, lose, or embarrass the
surveillance as this may anger and alert them. It also may cause them to
question whether you are, in fact, just a business person.
- In your hotel room, do not play investigator and start
looking for electronic listening devices. Ensure that you do not say or do
anything in your hotel room that you would not want to see printed on the
front page of The Wall Street Journal.
The above includes safety
tips that are recommended by the U.S. Department of State Overseas Security
Advisory Council (OSAC), of which IUPUI is a member.
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