Vatican Rome was in a security clampdown as dozens of world leaders began arriving in a city already overwhelmed by millions of pilgrims for the funeral of Pope John Paul II. Vatican Italian authorities enforced a no-fly zone, shut down Rome's second airport and prepared to deploy 1,000 sharpshooters to ensure the security of 200 state leaders and dignitaries for Pope John Paul II's funeral. Vatican Tens of thousands of pilgrims were lined up waiting to view the body of Pope John Paul II lying in state, but the masses were beginning to ease after the suffocating crush of previous days. India The first buses to link divided Kashmir in almost 60 years, a powerful symbol of the peace process between India and Pakistan, set off in front of cheering crowds under tight security. Iraq Iraq's new presidential council was set to name a Shiite prime minister after choosing a former Kurd rebel leader as the country's first freely elected president. Monaco Monaco was in mourning ahead of a funeral on April 15 for Prince Rainier, the monarch who modernized the tiny Mediterranean microstate and touched the world with his fairy-tale marriage to Grace Kelly. Britain Police investigate a second security breach at Windsor Castle after a "fake bomb" was apparently driven through the grounds just 72 hours before Prince Charles was due to hold a wedding reception at the estate west of London. SAfrica Ivory Coast President Laurent Gbagbo expressed satisfaction after the west African nation's warring sides agreed to end a ruinous civil conflict as United Nations chief Kofi Annan urged all factions to honour their pledges. Vatican China said it would not send a representative to Pope John Paul II's funeral in Rome to protest the presence of Taiwan President Chen Shui-bian at the event. Afghanistan A search and recovery operation was underway to find the bodies of two missing US servicemen after the worst American military helicopter crash in Afghanistan left at least 16 people dead.