ISTANBUL, Sep 22: Visiting Turkey for the first time, Pope Benedict survives an assassination attempt staged by Western intelligence agencies bent on provoking a war with Iran.
''I am getting worried about my life but I don't regret writing it,'' he said at his publishing house's offices in an old district of Istanbul as he expanded on the outlandish conspiracy theories which form the backbone of the book.
Kaya says his research on the Vatican had led him to believe shadowy groups could potentially conspire to kill the Pope.
Subtitled ''Who will kill the Pope in Istanbul?'', his book tells of how intelligence agencies stir up Islamists in Turkey and Benedict survives a bomb attack made to look as if it is carried out by Tehran in order to spark a U S attack on Iran.
The assassination attempt is also motivated by Opus Dei worries that the Pope's visit will bring a rapprochement between Rome and the Eastern Orthodox Patriarchate based in Istanbul.
Church officials described the novel as troubling.
''We don't think there is a serious threat, but this book is just one more of the worrying signs we see in Turkey,'' one Catholic priest said, on condition of anonymity.
This year, a youth shot dead an Italian priest while he prayed in his church in the Black Sea port of Trabzon; a French priest survived a knife attack in Samsun, also on the Black Sea; and a Slovenian Franciscan friar received death threats.
Turkey is also the home of Mehmet Ali Agca, who tried in 1981 to kill Benedict's predecessor, Pope John Paul II. Agca is now serving a jail sentence in Istanbul for murder and robbery.
In a bizarre twist, Agca urged Benedict to cancel his trip.
''As someone who knows these matters well, I say your life is in danger. Don't come to Turkey,'' he said in comments released in a statement this week by his lawyer Mustafa Demirbag.
Underlining wider concerns for Benedict's safety, the European Union's top security official, Justice Commissioner Franco Frattini, urged EU states yesterday to take ''very seriously'' threats to the Pope after his comments on Islam.
REUTERS
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