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AP/Press Association Images

Security upped at the Vatican amid fears of an attack

Iraq’s ambassador to the Holy See said the threats against the pope are credible.

SECURITY HAS BEEN tightened in Saint Peter’s Square after intelligence services intercepted a possible plan to attack the Vatican, Italian media reported today.

A foreign security service alerted Italy this week after intercepting a conversation between two Arab speakers which referred to “a demonstrative act, Wednesday, at the Vatican,” Il Messaggero reported.

Wednesday is the day the pope holds his weekly general audience in the square in front of St Peter’s Basilica.

Checks by Italy’s anti-terrorism unit revealed that one of the speakers passed through the country eight months ago, heightening concerns the threat may be real.

Vatican Daily Life AP / Press Association Images AP / Press Association Images / Press Association Images

Earlier warnings that the Islamic State extremists may be plotting to attack the pope have been shrugged off by the Vatican, but security has nonetheless been increased for his Wednesday and Sunday audiences, the paper said.

The Repubblica daily said plain clothes special operations officers with sniffer dogs trained in seeking out explosives were helping Vatican police vet tourists, while hotels in the area were also being kept under surveillance.

The news came a day before Pope Francis’s trip to Albania, where the pontiff is expected to mingle with the crowds as usual despite reports of possible danger from new IS recruits returning from the Middle East to the mostly-Muslim country.

Vatican Pope AP / Press Association Images AP / Press Association Images / Press Association Images

The Pope has spoken out against the Islamic State group and the Holy See has voiced support for US air strikes in Iraq.

In an interview with Italy’s La Nazione daily this week, Iraq’s ambassador to the Holy See, Habib Al Sadr, said “what has been declared by the self-declared Islamic State is clear. They want to kill the pope. The threats against the pope are credible.”

The Vatican played down the warning, saying security measures for the trip would remain unchanged.

- © AFP, 2014

Read: The Pope has ditched the bulletproof Popemobile > 

Read: Pope Francis asks for forgiveness after first meeting with abuse survivors > 

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