Custom-built ‘Popemobile’ to secure Pope Francis in PHL visit
November 27, 2014 3:52pm
The Philippines will custom-build a "Popemobile" for Pope Francis during his visit in the country in January next year, organizers said Thursday.
 
"He is our visitor and we can't let anything bad happen to him," the government's chief protocol officer Marciano Paynor said, adding, however, that there were "no specific threats."
 
Pope Francis, who has shunned the pomp of his predecessors, said earlier this year that he prefers to use open-top cars rather than the Vatican's bulletproof "Popemobile" used by previous pontiffs, which he called a "sardine can."
 
"It is true something could happen to me but let's be realistic, at my age I do not have much to lose," he said in June, adding that the "Popemobile" made it hard to connect with the faithful.
 
Paynor declined to give the specifications of the vehicle to be used for security reasons, but said the Pope might opt for an open car for some appearances.
 
A total of six million people are expected to turn up when the Pontiff hears Mass in Tacloban City, ravaged by last year's super typhoon Yolanda (Haiyan) on January 17 and at the Luneta in Manila the following day, he said.
 
"The Pope requested that it be kept simple. He wants nothing flamboyant," said Father Antonio Pascual from the organizing committee.
 
The "Popemobile" was being designed in coordination with Vatican security, said presidential communications undersecretary Jess Yu, another member of the organizing committee.
 
"Definitely, the Pope will be visible to the public (from the vehicle)," Yu said.
 
In August, comments by the preparatory committee sparked speculation that the Pope could be transported in a jeepney – a common form of cheap public transport, often decorated with colourful religious artwork, evolved from the jeep.
 
But officials would not confirm the speculation Thursday.
 
The last Pope to visit the Philippines, John Paul II, rode a white "Popemobile" in 1995, where he waved to crowds from a glass, bulletproof cage at the back of the vehicle. Authorities later uncovered an alleged plot by al Qaeda to assassinate John Paul while he was in Manila. 
 
The bulletproof "Popemobile" was first introduced after the attempted assassination of John Paul in 1981.
 
Two flower-bearing orphans will welcome Francis when he arrives in Manila from Colombo at dusk on January 15, organizers said.
 
Pope Francis will then spend the entire day on January 17 hearing Mass and comforting Yolanda victims in Tacloban and Palo town.
 
Yolanda, the strongest storm to hit land, left over 7,300 people dead or missing in November last year after it triggered tsunami-like storm surges that wiped out entire towns.
 
One year after the disaster, survivors are mired in deeper poverty as they struggle to rebuild their lives. — Agence France-Presse

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