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TERROR WARS
Security readied in Philippine for Papal visit
by Richard Tomkins
Manila (UPI) Jan 11, 2015


Rains threaten papal mass on storm-hit Philippine island
Manila (AFP) Jan 11, 2015 - The Philippines was watching nervously on Sunday as a tropical storm threatened a typhoon-prone central island that Pope Francis will visit this week on his tour of the fervently Catholic nation.

The country's weather bureau said a low-pressure area currently over the Pacific Ocean was on course for Leyte Island, touted as one of the highlights of the pontiff's four-day visit, and could develop into a storm by the time it enters Philippine waters on Thursday.

Leyte was the province worst-hit by Super Typhoon Haiyan in November 2013, and suffered landslides and floods late last year wrought by tropical storm Jangmi.

"Part of contingency planning are possible inclement scenarios.... options are being developed," presidential spokesman Herminio Coloma from the papal visit organising committee told AFP.

Asked if cancelling the events on Leyte island on January 17 was an option, Coloma said: "It's best to wait until the (weather disturbance) enters the Philippines before making specific contingency plans."

In a best-case scenario, the low pressure area would turn northwards and spare the country, but there is also an equal chance it will intensify into a storm, state weather forecaster Alvin Pura told AFP.

"This may hit the Eastern Visayas and bring rains to the pope's events," he said, referring to the island chain in which Leyte sits.

Pura could not immediately say how much rain was possible on Leyte if the storm developed and hit the island.

During the last week of 2014, the Eastern Visayas were caught offguard when a storm bearing relatively weak winds brought heavy rains, triggering flashfloods and landslides that killed 54 people.

The pontiff, who arrives in the country on Thursday, will be in Leyte on Saturday to give a mass at the airport in Tacloban, ground zero for Haiyan, and have lunch with storm survivors in nearby Palo town.

The weather disturbance was unlikely to affect another mass in Manila the day after, where millions are expected to attend, Pura said.

Partly cloudy skies and cool weather are expected in the capital on that day, he said.

The Philippines is hit by an average of 20 typhoons per year, many of them deadly.

Haiyan, the strongest typhoon to hit land with 230-kilometre (143-mile) per hour winds, brought tsunami like waves to the central Philippines, wiping out entire towns and leaving more than 7,350 people dead or missing.

disclaimer: image is for illustration purposes only

Thousands of troops and police in the Philippines have been placed on high alert for the visit starting this week of Pope Francis, his first to the country.

As many as 37,000 security personnel are involved -- including 17,000 active and reserve personnel of the Philippine Armed forces, and about 3,000 members of the Philippine National Police in addition to local law enforcement personnel – in the Metro Manila area and the island of Leyte, where the pope will make two stops.

The Argentine-born head of the Roman Catholic Church arrives in Manila on Thursday from Sri Lanka and departs on Monday, Jan. 19.

"We have prepared for all scenarios with all resources we have," said Department of Defense spokesman Dr. Peter Paul Galvez. All government security agencies are in close coordination to ensure that ... our (brothers and sisters) attending and observing this event concentrate and fully experience the spiritual encounter of the Pope's pastoral visit to the Filipino flock.

Added Philippine National Police spokesperson Chief Supt. Wilben (cq) Mayor: "All possible situations are being considered and appropriate contingency responses are studied for implementation if necessary."

The Philippines is predominately Roman Catholic. Latest studies show about 80 percent of its 100 million people are in various degrees followers of the denomination, which arrived with Spain's conquistadors in the 16th Century. The remaining 20 percent are mainly Protestants and Muslims.

The church's influence is strong. Local church leaders helped topple the martial law government of President Ferdinand Marco in 1986 by calling upon the faithful to demonstrate in the streets in the "People's Power" revolution. But increasingly secularization in Filipino thinking has also chipped away at that power. Philippine legislators in 2012 bowed to their constituents and passed a reproductive health bill to educate and provide people -- especially the poor in rural areas -- with birth control devices such as pills and IUDs. Passage of the law, and its approval by President Benigno A quino III – defied a campaign from Catholic church pulpits.

Church groups immediately launched appeals to stop the law, but the country's Supreme Court has ruled most of the key provisions of the legislation were not unconstitutional, thus clearing a path to its implementation.

The pope is expected to speak to inter-faith respect between Christians and Muslims and cooperation during his visit, which will include appearances in areas devastated by a major typhoon.

Philippine government officials say they have received no specific "credible" intelligence on possible terrorist plots against Pope Francis during his visit to the Philippines but are not complacent, especially following the recent terror events in Paris.

However, "it (the Paris events) can give people ideas so it can't be discounted," a Philippine national security source told UPI.

Neither can a lone wolf type of attack. In 1970, visiting Pope Paul VI was slightly wounded when he arrived on a visit to the Philippines. A disgruntled Brazilian artist, wearing priestly robes, lunged at him with a knife from a crowd at the airport when the pontiff arrived.

A spokesman for the Maoist New People's Army on the island of Mindanao said "since most of our fighters are Catholics, it was just fitting to pay respect during Pope Francis' visit in the country by extending the ceasefire" begun at Christmas, the Philippine Daily Inquirer reported. "We are extending the ceasefire (period) until after the visit of Pope Francis."

Mindanao is located in the southern Philippines, where government troops are also battling Muslim groups such as Abu Sayaf, which is linked to al-Qaida.


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