Bangkok Post

Govt guarantees Pope’s safety after vandal attacks

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SANTIAGO: Pope Francis will not be at risk during his trip to Chile this week, despite a series of attacks at Catholic churches in the capital Santiago, Interior Minister Mario Fernandez said on Saturday.

Unknown vandals set fire to at least two churches, threw a homemade bomb at one and left pamphlets with threatenin­g messages to the pontiff early on Friday morning, days before his arrival in the South American country. No one was injured, and no group has claimed responsibi­lity for the attacks.

Mr Fernandez told local radio station BioBio that small groups with limited capabiliti­es were to blame, but he did not name them.

“These are serious and inexcusabl­e actions, but we have to put things in perspectiv­e,” he said. “We are not talking about significan­t groups that are truly dangerous.”

Pope Francis, who hails from Argentina and is the first Latin American pope, will arrive in Chile today. A Mass he has planned to hold tomorrow in a Santiago park is expected to attract more than 500,000 people.

Various groups are planning demonstrat­ions on issues ranging from indigenous rights to a sexual abuse scandal.

The pope will also visit the cities of Temuco and Iquique before heading to Peru.

In Lima, an overnight fire at the foot of a 35-meter statue of Jesus Christ left the monument sooty on Saturday. Police said that was the result of an electrical failure, rather than an attack.

 ??  ?? Mounted Chilean police patrol in front of the Metropolit­an Cathedral in Santiago ahead of Pope Francis’s visit to Chile on Saturday. Pope Francis will be in Chile until Thursday.
Mounted Chilean police patrol in front of the Metropolit­an Cathedral in Santiago ahead of Pope Francis’s visit to Chile on Saturday. Pope Francis will be in Chile until Thursday.

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