World / Refugees And Migrants

Pope visits frontline of refugee crisis

21:31 pm on 16 April 2016

Pope Francis arrived on the Greek island of Lesbos on Saturday, turning the world's attention to the "human catastrophe" of Europe's refugee crisis which has claimed hundreds of lives in the past year.

Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras, right, and Archbishop of Constantinople and Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew I, left, greet Pope Francis at the airport. Photo: AFP

Pope Francis, leader of the world's 1.2 billion Roman Catholics, was scheduled to spend about six hours on the small Aegean island. He will meet 250 refugees and have lunch with eight of them.

Hundreds of people have died making the short but precarious crossing from Turkey to the Lesbos shores in inflatable dinghies in the past year, and the island is full of unmarked graves.

"This is a trip that is a bit different than the others ... this is a trip marked by sadness," The Pope told reporters on the airplane taking him to Lesbos.

Pope Francis told journalists they were going to encounter "the greatest humanitarian catastrophe since World War Two". Photo: AFP

"We are going to encounter the greatest humanitarian catastrophe since World War Two. We will see many people who are suffering, who don't know where to go, who had to flee.

"We are also going to a cemetery, the sea. So many people died there ... this is what is in my heart as I make this trip," he said.

With Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew, leader of the world's Orthodox Christians, and Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras, Pope Francis will visit Moria, a sprawling, fenced complex holding more than 3000 refugees.

"This is an island which has lifted all the weight of Europe upon its shoulders," Mr Tsipras told Pope Francis at Lesbos airport, where a red carpet was rolled out for the pontiff's arrival.

Greek state TV reported Pope Francis was planning to take ten refugees back with him to the Vatican, eight of them Syrians.

Aid organizations have described conditions at Moria, a disused army camp, as appalling.

Journalists have no access to the facility on a hillside just outside Lesbos's main town of Mytiline, but aid workers said walls were whitewashed, a sewer system fixed and several dozen migrants at the overcrowded facility were transferred to another camp, which the pope would not visit.

A woman holds a placard welcoming the Pope to the Moria refugee camp. Photo: AFP

Aid organizations said queues for food were long, and people often wait for an hour or more.

Saturday's encounter with refugees would be no frills and the religious leaders would eat the same food as everyone else at the camp, an official at the camp told Reuters.

Greek media reported Saturday's fare would be risotto and mushrooms and olives, and halva, a sweetbread made with sesame and honey.

-Reuters