http://www.guardian.co.uk/worldlatest/story/0,1280,-4916088,00.html

 

Anti-Terror Forces Ready for Pope Funeral 


Tuesday April 5, 2005 11:46 PM

AP Photo PL104 

By AIDAN LEWIS 

Associated Press Writer 

ROME (AP) - Italian air force jets are ready to scramble. Police are
burrowing through the labyrinth of drains and aqueducts under the city
looking for bombs. Snipers are staked out on strategic rooftops. 

The millions of people and the 200 foreign delegations expected for Pope
John Paul II's funeral Friday offer a tempting target for any terrorist
group hoping to score a spectacular strike. Authorities insist they have
taken all possible measures to prevent such an attack. 

``Precautions have been taken for airports, stations and all the other
places where people gather,'' said an official of the Rome prefect's office,
which is responsible for coordinating the security apparatus. 

Air traffic over central Rome likely will be banned Friday, the official
said on condition of anonymity. 

The military-civilian airport of Ciampino may be closed to commercial
flights, and traffic to and from the main airport at Fiumicino, 16 miles
from Rome, may be curtailed, the official said. 

Radar is scanning the air for any irregular activity, ready to alert pilots
on standby. Helicopters have begun regular patrols. 

Italy has not been a direct target of international terrorism in recent
years. But in the 1970s and 1980s, the Italian Red Brigades cowed the
nation, and Palestinian groups struck with devastating effectiveness. 

But like all European security networks, Italy has heightened its
anti-terror efforts following the Sept. 11 attacks in the United States and
last year's train bombings in Madrid. 

The Europeans have strengthened their cross-border cooperation and the
sharing of information, though many experts say it has not gone far enough. 

Italian authorities have arrested dozens of suspects, aided by a new
international terrorism charge introduced following the New York attacks. 

In Milan, where prosecutors have investigated Muslim extremist cells based
in the north of Italy, a judge handed down the first al-Qaida-related guilty
verdict since the Sept. 11 attacks, convicting seven Tunisians for helping
recruits for al-Qaida get fake documents. 

The suspects included Essid Sami Ben Khemais, the alleged logistics head of
Osama bin Laden's terrorist operations in Europe. 

However, other cases have fallen apart, including one against nine Moroccans
accused separately of planning an attack on the U.S. Embassy in Rome. 

Dozens of monarchs, presidents and prime ministers will attend John Paul
II's funeral, including President Bush, former Presidents George H.W. Bush
and Bill Clinton, and Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice. 

Authorities also are expecting as many as 4 million pilgrims, mourners and
tourists. Poland's Foreign Ministry said 2 million people were expected from
that country alone. 

The 10,000 police normally deployed in Rome will be reinforced with nearly
6,500 additional agents from around Italy, the Interior Ministry said. About
5,000 will be deployed around the Vatican and Rome, with the rest providing
escorts to the official delegations. 

Provisions include armored cars, bomb-disposal teams with dogs, and 800
motorcycle escorts. 

 



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