Arab News

Massive security net in Iraq as pope begins visit ‘like a pilgrim of peace’

Special forces, undercover intelligen­ce, drones, explosives team, counterter­rorism experts deployed

- Francesco Bongarra Rome

POPE FRANCIS IN IRAQ

Iraq is deploying thousands of additional security personnel to protect Pope Francis during his four-day visit, which comes after a spate of rocket and suicide bomb attacks raised fears for the Catholic leader’s safety.

A senior security official who has been briefed on the security plan said that forces involved had been trained to deal with worst-case scenarios, from street battles to bombings and rocket attacks.

Large-scale exercises included hypothetic­al threats among preparatio­ns for the March 5-8 visit, the first-ever by a pope to Iraq. As well as concerns over violence, the country has seen a spike in COVID-19 cases, further complicati­ng preparatio­ns. The 84-year-old will visit four cities, including the former Daesh stronghold of Mosul, where churches and other buildings still bear the scars of conflict. Francis will also visit Ur, birthplace of Prophet Abraham who is revered by Christians, Muslims and Jews, and meet Iraq’s top Shiite cleric, 90-year-old Grand Ayatollah Ali Al-Sistani. Interior Ministry special forces and the army will set up a security cordon around the pope wherever he goes, while the air force will operate

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drones around the clock to monitor the routes he will take. There will be an explosives team and counterter­rorism personnel on standby in case of any suspicious devices or street battles. Undercover intelligen­ce and national security officers will also be deployed at gatherings attended by the pope. A technical team can also jam or cut off suspicious phone calls or radio communicat­ions, he added. About 10,000 security personnel will be deployed to protect Francis, who may travel in armored cars in what would be a departure from the norm for him.

Pope Francis said in a video message on Thursday that he wants to be seen by the Iraqi people as a “penitent pilgrim” asking God for “forgivenes­s and reconcilia­tion after years of war and terrorism,” and for “consolatio­n of hearts and the healing of wounds.”

He added: “I come among you like a pilgrim of peace and I repeat, you are all brothers. I come as a pilgrim of peace in search of fraternity animated by desire to pray together and to walk together, also with brothers and sisters belonging to other religious traditions.” A special bronze medal has been minted by the Vatican to celebrate the pope’s visit. Vatican sources told Arab News that the medal will be one of the gifts that the pope will give to Iraqi representa­tives. The medal has been designed by artists from the Ufficio Filatelico e Numismatic­o, the dedicated branch of the Vatican State Post Office for stamps and coins. It features the map of Iraq, the Tigris and Euphrates rivers, a palm tree and Abraham leaving Ur. In the lower part of the medal, there is the inscriptio­n of the apostolic visit’s dates (March 5-8) in Latin, the official language of the Vatican. In its upper part the medal reads “Visit Iraquiam,” Latin for “Visit to Iraq.”

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 ?? AFP ?? The flags of Iraq and the Vatican flutter outside Baghdad’s Al-Firdaus Mosque on Thursday ahead of the pope’s visit.
AFP The flags of Iraq and the Vatican flutter outside Baghdad’s Al-Firdaus Mosque on Thursday ahead of the pope’s visit.

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