Pope to Leave for Kazakhstan and Armenia This Weekend

ROME, Sept. 20--Despite some nervousness at the Vatican, Pope John Paul II has insisted that he will leave on Saturday for a trip to Kazakhstan, where officials are planning "unprecedented" security measures during his four-day visit.

Kazakhstan, where Muslims are a slight majority, is struggling to keep out Islamic radicals like those who have been fighting sporadically in neighboring Kyrgyzstan and Uzbekistan for the last two years. Militants in those countries are believed to have been trained in Afghanistan, home to Osama bin Laden, who the United States suspects is behind the attacks in New York and Washington.

The entire region is on edge waiting for the United States to retaliate, though ethnic and religious tensions in Kazakhstan itself remain relatively low. The Vatican says it has no evidence of threats against the pope. In the past, papal trips to Northern Ireland and Sarajevo, Bosnia, have been canceled over security concerns.

When aides have raised security concerns, the pope has said it is even more important now to reach out to Muslims in Central Asia.

His hosts will have 2,400 soldiers and police officers patrolling the streets of the capital city, Astana, while he is there.

"Given the situation in Afghanistan, we are on alert," Erlan Idrisov, the foreign minister of Kazakhstan, said in an interview today. Of Islamic radicals in nearby countries, he said, "There are signs there are attempts to send that evil to Kazakhstan, but we want to stay free of the disease."

That is one reason the Kazakh president, Nursultan Nazarbayev, lobbied for the pope to visit in the first place. The country's multi-ethnic population of 15 million includes some 8 million Muslims, 6 million Orthodox Christians and about 300,000 Roman Catholics, most of them from families deported to there by Stalin.

Worry over the trip stems not only from uncertainty in the region, but also from the fact that John Paul has reportedly been targeted by Islamic militants before; the Philippine police have said they uncovered a plot by Ramzi Yousef, who was convicted in the 1993 bombing of the World Trade Center, to assassinate him during a visit there in 1995.

The Italian public is also skittish after the attacks in America, and the press here has published speculation, some of it apparently based on reports by a psychic, that the pope is the next target of the terrorists responsible for the attackslast week.

In Kazakhstan, meanwhile, "there are rumors that in the wake of the terrorist attacks, he wouldn't come," Mr. Idrisov said, adding that "we fully appreciate his courage" in deciding to make the trip anyway.

The 81-year-old pope's determination to make the trip now reflects one of his most cherished goals: bringing Roman Catholics and Orthodox Christians closer together. Vatican officials believe that he may actually have a better chance now if only because the Orthodox may for the moment be more likely to see Catholics less as the competition than as comrades in common cause against Islamic radicals.

Still, Russian Orthodox Church officials continue to oppose the pope's plan to visit Moscow someday. The Orthodox Church in Kazakhstan is also under the canonical jurisdiction of Moscow, where church officials see this trip as another papal invasion of their territory. In June, the pope visited Ukraine despite official criticism from the Ukrainian Orthodox Church.

A sizable Muslim crowd is expected at two outdoor Masses in Kazakhstan, though. On Saturday evening, the pope's first Mass is at a monument to "victims of the totalitarian regime," a reference to the many thousands of German, Ukrainian and Polish Catholics, including a number of priests and nuns, who died there in Stalinist work camps.

On Tuesday, the pope plans to travel to Armenia, where he will join celebrations of 1,700 years of Christianity as the state religion. Armenians were the first to adopt Christianity as their official religion in 301.

Despite his age and deteriorating health, the pope, who suffers from Parkinson's disease, plans to keep up a packed schedule throughout the six-day trip and to return to Rome next Thursday.