Monthly Archives: April 2016

Greece:An image of weakness

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The image a country projects beyond its borders is of crucial importance. Just over 10 years ago, Greece was a leading political and economic player in the Balkans. Turkey was on the rise, but the asymmetry between the two countries was not that visible. Nowadays Greece really comes across as the European Union’s Puerto Rico. The country is living on bailout tranches and loans and it has yet to come up with its own reform plan that will put it back on its feet.

Meanwhile, Balkan leaders are addressing Greece’s leadership with disdain, Turkey is acting as the region’s ruler and the Europeans are dealing with Recep Tayyip Erdogan as if he were a neo-Ottoman sultan.

And what’s worse, Greece has adopted an enraging argument when carrying out negotiations with powerful players abroad. In the past, Greek leaders such as Eleftherios Venizelos and Constantine Karamanlis spoke to their foreign interlocutors as equals, making and earning major strategic concessions by taking risky decisions. Now Greece is asking those beyond our borders to not leave us to our own devices because the country has a pivotal geopolitical position and becoming a failed state would have serious repercussions.

Out of necessity, the Europeans have established a sui generis protectorate with regard to the refugee-migrant issue. To a large extent the Greek state has been substituted in terms of guarding its borders and managing the hot spots on the eastern Aegean islands. On the other hand, unprecedented situations emerge in places where the Greek state is the only one in charge. For instance, authorities in the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia (FYROM) return refugees and migrants to Greece through holes in the fences. We slowly became used to all this.

An imbalance between rhetoric and actions makes the phenomenon even more unpleasant. When it comes to international affairs everyone knows that when someone barks without ever biting, not even once, they end up becoming predictable. Big words, political negotiations and displays of military power may still be convincing on the local level but they certainly don’t have the same effect abroad.

Greece has been through similar periods during its history. These often ended in some form of tragedy which subsequently led to the rebirth of the nation. Some believe that history will repeat itself.

Hopefully this will not be the case and Greece will find the strength to rebuild the country without experiencing an even larger disaster. Besides, you can’t fool anyone anymore. A country’s power on the international scene depends primarily on its economic power, the stability of its institutions and whether or not it has a gutsy and professional leadership. Greece’s image abroad is poor. Unfortunately, it is a fair reflection of the country’s current state of decay.

source:ekathimerini.com

ABCC motion facing defeat in Senate, July 2 election is increasingly likely

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A July 2 election is increasingly likely as crossbench senators dig in against Turnbull government plans to restore the building industry watchdog.

Independent senator Nick Xenophon believes legislation to reinstate the Australian Building and Construction Commission will fail in the upper house for a second time.

‘We will be going to the polls on July 2,’ he told ABC radio on Monday.Parliament has been recalled three weeks early so the Senate can deal with bills Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull has threatened to use as a trigger for a double-dissolution election.

There is no guarantee the ABCC bill will even get to the stage where amendments are even considered by the Senate.If it does, Senator Xenophon plans to move an amendment which ensures Australian steel is used on building projects.

Fellow crossbenchers Glenn Lazarus, Jacqui Lambie and John Madigan are opposed to the legislation in its existing form.Liberal Democrat David Leyonhjelm believes the latest opinion polls, showing Labor and the coalition neck and neck, may influence the government.

‘Perhaps they have changed it from a non-genuine offer to negotiate to a genuine offer,’ he told reporters. Attorney-General George Brandis insists Employment Minister Michaelia Cash has been negotiating with crossbenchers in good faith.He rejected claims the government was not serious about passing the bill.

Asked about the numbers in the chamber, Senator Brandis told ABC radio: ‘I don’t think we will know until we get to the final vote’.Senator Cash says she will continue to have an ongoing dialogue.

‘I think everybody knows in politics anything can happen at any time,’ she said.Both ministers also hit out at a ‘hysterical’ trade union ad which claims under the ABCC ice addicts have more rights than construction workers.

‘It goes to show the depths to which the CFMEU will stoop in trying to protect their own position in this industry that the best they can do is run a campaign which is utterly dishonest,’ Senator Brandis said.

source:skynews.com.au

Manuel Pellegrini hits out at Man City over Pep Guardiola announcement after Chelsea win

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MANUEL PELLEGRINI reckons Manchester City’s decision to announce Pep Guardiola as their new manager in February wrecked their chances of the title.

City, with Kevin De Bruyne in superlative form against the team who let him go, cruised to an easy win at Stamford Bridge to cap a superb week that saw them reach the Champions League semi-finals.

But the dignified Chilean’s patience finally snapped as he poured out his frustration at what might have been had City’s decision to announce Guardiola’s arrival and the huge speculation around it not affected the minds of his players.

Pellegrini clearly believes that had he been allowed to get on with his job – and not been affected by crippling injuries to his best players – City could have been challenging for the title. Instead, they are left scrapping for fourth place.

With all their best players back and fit they showed what they could really do at Stamford Bridge as they masterfully dismantled a Chelsea side who cannot wait for this season to end.

At the point of the Pellegrini announcement on February 1 City were second in the table, three points behind Leicester and two ahead of Tottenham. They lost successive home games against the pair and won only one of their next six matches.

Pellegrini watched Sergio Aguero net a hat-trick to take him to 21 goals for the season on Saturday and said: “Yes, I am frustrated. Of course, because we never expected to lose those games against Leicester and Tottenham. But there are reasons.

“At the start of February there was news about change of the manager, about players who will not continue next season, about a lot of things that involved the minds of the players.

“It’s not easy for players to focus when you read about the things that will happen next season – players who will go, players that will come in.

“In February we were involved in all competitions and we won the Capital One Cup. We were three points behind the leaders. We had to leave the FA Cup because of congestion, and we had injuries. A lot of reasons we couldn’t continue in that way.

“But this squad has character. We never give up, and I hope we will see that in the Champions League. I am sure this team can reach in the final.

“We must try to finish playing this way, trying to be as near as possible to the top of the table. It will be a good season if we win two trophies.”

Injuries to key players also killed Pellegrini’s challenge with De Bruyne missing for two months, Sami Nasri for six, Aguero battling various problems, and skipper Vincent Kompany still out.

Pellegrini added: “Except for the first five games of the seasons we never could play all of them together. That is the important difference.

“Aguero has to try to play the whole season. When you are 100 per cent fit and playing every week of course your performance is better. He made a mistake playing for Argentina when he had some muscle problems. That meant he couldn’t play for five or six games.”

City face Real Madrid and Cristiano Ronaldo in the first leg of their semi-final on Tuesday week at the Etihad, and on the evidence of this superb counter-attacking performance they have every chance.

Pellegrini said: “Real have very important players – but so do we.” Especially De Bruyne and Aguero.

After a bright start by Chelsea, when Nicolas Otamendi kicked Pedro’s shot off the line and Joe Hart tipped Ruben Loftus-Cheek’s shot away, City took over with ruthless brilliance.

De Bruyne, allowed to slip away by Chelsea two years ago for just £18million, raced away to set up Aguero for the first, from a Chelsea corner. Then in another lethal break, De Bruyne fed Nasri, who slipped in Aguero to finish.

It would have been more but for Thibault Courtois, but then the hapless keeper took out Fernandinho when he burst through. Off he went, and Aguero did not waste this spot-kick.

Chelsea were utterly woeful. Guus Hiddink could only pluck the feeble plus point that at least next season they won’t have to face the Europa League.

“It will give the new management and directors a chance to build a good team competing for the top four,” he said. It has got that bad.

CHELSEA (4-2-3-1): Courtois 6; Azpilicueta 5, Cahill 5, Ivanovic 6, Rahman 6; Mikel 6 (Begovic 79), Fabregas 6; Willian 6 (Traore 69, 6), Loftus Cheek 6, Pedro 7 (Kenedy 69, 6); Costa 6. Booked: Azpilicueta, Mikel. Sent off: Courtois. NEXT UP: Bournemouth (a) Sat, PL.

MAN CITY (4-3-3-1): Hart 7; Zabaleta 7 (Sagna 66, 6), Mangala 7, Otamendi 7, Kolarov 7; Toure 7, Fernandinho 7; Navas 7, De Bruyne 8, Nasri 7 (Delph 74, 6); Aguero 7 (Iheanacho 84).Booked: Zabaleta, Otamendi, Nasri. Goals: Aguero 33, 54, 80 pen. NEXT UP: Newcastle (a) tomorrow, PL.

source:express.co.uk

David Beckham set to play in Sydney for Manchester United and Juventus legends’ game

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David Beckham in Australia: His first appearance was during the Hyundai Club Challenge match between Sydney FC and LA Galaxy at Telstra Stadium Sydney in 2007. Photo: Robert Gray

One of the most recognisable names in world sport is set to play in Australia later this year with David Beckham leading an all-star cast for a football legends match in Sydney.

After failed bids to lure Beckham to the A-League three years ago and fans of the icon having to wait six years to see him, the former Manchester United, LA Galaxy and AC Milan star is set to finally play in Australia. Fairfax Media understands a deal for the former England captain to play in an exhibition match between former stars of Manchester United and Juventus is close to being sealed.

Beckham will be one of many high-profile former players to take part in the game between two of the most recognisable names in world football. It will be the first time since a friendly between LA Galaxy and Newcastle Jets in 2010 that Beckham has played in Australia. His first appearance – a friendly against Sydney FC in 2007 – attracted more than 80,000.

Beckham is set to play for Manchester United in the fixture in October or November and could be joined by Dwight Yorke, Phil Neville, Ole Gunnar Solskjaer and Ryan Giggs and coached by Sir Alex Ferguson.

It’s understood one of Juventus’ greatest players, Alessandro Del Piero, will not take part in the Sydney game. Despite spending 19 years with the Bianconeri before moving to Australia to play two seasons with Sydney FC, Del Piero won’t play in a game that could hold some significance for him.

The former Juventus captain has not played in any of Juventus’ recent legends games since effectively retiring after leaving Indian Premier League club, Delhi Dynamos, in 2014. He famously played against Juventus when captaining the A-League All Stars in 2014.

French international David Trezeguet will almost certainly take part in the match as president of the Juventus’ Legends program. The Argentine-born French international was on the cusp of signing a guest player deal with Victorian Premier League club Hume City for their FFA Cup semi-final against Melbourne Victory last year.

While their team to play in Australia remains some way off being decided, recent Juventus legends games have included Czech star Pavel Nedved, Edgar Davids, Mauro Camoranesi, Paolo Montero, Angelo Peruzzi and Ciro Ferrara.

Despite being contested between players some years past their prime, the legends concept proved popular among football fans in Australia as more than 40,000 attended a match between former Liverpool players and past Socceroos internationals at ANZ Stadium last year.

Anfield greats Steven Gerrard, Ian Rush, Luis Garcia and John Arne-Riise proved impressive drawcards for that match. It’s likely an even greater crowd will flock to Olympic Park for a contest between former players of two of the most supported clubs in world football who dominated Europe and their respective leagues in the late 1990s and early 2000s.

source:theherald.com.au

EPL: Chelsea are destroyed by Man City 0-3

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Manuel Pellegrini described Sergio Aguero as the best striker in the Barclays Premier League after his hat-trick sealed a 3-0 victory for Manchester City at Chelsea.

Aguero’s clinical treble took his tally to 21 league goals this season, and 99 in 146 BPL matches since joining Man City in August 2011.

The win at Stamford Bridge moved Man City up to third in the table, one point above Arsenal ahead of the Gunners’ match against Crystal Palace on Sunday, and Pellegrini praised the manner of his side’s third straight league victory.

Pellegrini said: “I think tonight was a complete game, and it’s three very important points because we want to finish as near the top of the table as we can.

“Sergio Aguero? I am sure he is the best striker in this league. Of course he’s a very important player. It was a big performance for the team.”

For more reaction from Pellegrini, watch his post-match press conference by clicking on the video above.

source:premierleague.com

Tsipras says pope’s visit to Lesvos is historic

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Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras says Pope Francis’ visit to the Greek island of Lesvos is a historic event and an important opportunity to highlight the need to find a legal route into Europe for those fleeing conflict.

Tsipras says he is proud of the Greek people for welcoming refugees and other migrants at a time when they are suffering under austerity measures imposed on Greece by the country’s international lenders.

“I am proud of this, particularly at a time when some of our partners – even in the name of Christian Europe – were erecting walls and fences to prevent defenseless people from seeking a better life. That is why I consider that your visit is historic and important,” Tsipras told Francis shortly after his arrival at the airport Saturday.

He said the pope’s visit “is a very important opportunity to show the need to stop the war, the taking advantage of people and to give the possibility of a legal route for these people who leave their homes and search for a better future in Europe.”

source:ekathimerini.com

Australia:Meraki TV returns to cable

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Billy Cotsis speaks to the producer of the show, Ane Sevo

Meraki TV is a Greek Australian TV program made by and for Greeks living here in Australia.

By Greeks, I mean those born in Greece, but more importantly, subsequent generations. Meraki TV’s main goal is to be one of the means whereby second, third and fourth generation Greeks can connect, share their unique experience, and learn about the positive aspects of their culture.

Billy Cotsis (BC): This will be the third season for Meraki TV. Tell us about the first two – how did they go? Did they meet your expectations?
Ane Sevo (AS): The first two seasons were amazing! Among the big names of Christos Dantis, Angelo Tsarouchas, Master Tempo, Vegas, Kostas Sommer, and Alekos Zazopoulos we introduced amazing local talent such as the party pirates, author Will Kostakis, and historians Effy Alexis and Leonard Janiszewski. We spoke to the University Greek Societies from Victoria University and UTS, introduced our Kids Corner with Yiannaki, launched Helen’s Kouzina with celebrity chef Helen Demetriou (My Kitchen Rules). We also compiled mini- documentaries on everything from the Oracle at Delphi to the origins of the Zeibekiko and in between got all the glam and gossip from our celebrity socialite Stavroula, and of course, the king of Greek music in Australia DJ Krazy Kon kept us up to date with music news.

BC: Foxtel continues to grow in this country. Recently it scored a major coup with rugby league and AFL rights that are worth billions. Where do you see community TV evolving in the future? Will Foxtel remain the best platform?
AS: With the government cut backs on community TV and radio, community- based programs are all being pushed onto the web. Foxtel has shown great vision in keeping its Aurora channel. It gives us little guys access to an audience and a platform that we otherwise would not have.

BC: What are we expecting from Meraki TV this season? Any surprises?
AS: Firstly, our team has grown, with fresh young presenters jumping on board to make sure we properly represent that segment of our community. We’re also extending our Kids Corner this year. Get ready for the great Pita Challenge, Eat it or Wear it – Greek Style, some Greek toy reviews and more!

Comedy is also on the agenda this season. We can’t wait for you all to meet yiayia MD – you’re going to love her! We want to get more local music on this season. If you’re a muso/singer you need to get in touch with us.

BC: You have a star studded line-up, from arguably one of the biggest DJ’s and dance producers in the country to a socialite. Tell us about your reporters.
AS: DJ Krazy Kon is the man when it comes to Greek music, not only in Australia but now internationally. When he decided to launch a locally-mixed Greek CD he was scoffed at; he’s just released volume 17 of his Greece series and is constantly invited to tour the US. He’s a shining example of just how alive and thriving Hellenism is in this country.

Stavroula has been in Greek TV all the way back to her days with Harry Michaels. She has sass, style and brains. Her glitz and goss is the perfect balance between juicy gossip, interesting current affairs, fashion and style!

Maria Hohlastou was born and raised in Australia, but left and lived in Greece for nearly 20 years. She thrived until the crisis, and like so many, came back to her ‘other’ country. Maria gives an incredibly unique perspective. She understands the Greeks from Greece’s viewpoint and deeply feels the Grozzie viewpoint. She epitomises the great struggle we all have between being Greek and being Australian.

Helen Demetriou first came to light in My Kitchen Rules with her brother Steve. In Helen’s Kouzina she gets to showcase her love for Greek food!

Demitra Alexandria, only 23 years old and with a professionalism and attitude way beyond her years is a girl to watch. In 10 years time we will all be saying ‘I remember her on Meraki TV!’. Incredibly beautiful, intelligent and passionate.

Yianna Carpis, only just 18 and like so many Greeks her age, heading off for a European adventure between semesters. Yianna will bring us a totally different perspective. Fun, vivacious and incredibly cheeky, she will have all of us booking our next trip.

And then, of course, there’s you Billy, a well-respected journalist and deeply passionate Hellene.

BC: Where do you see the show going in the next five years?
AS: We will be filming in every part of the country and also bringing you stories from all around the globe. Once we’ve united Australia we can’t wait to unite with the rest of the world – South Africa, London, Chicago, Boston, New Zealand – even Iceland!

BC: A number of sponsors have come on board – how important are they to the show?
AS: Our sponsors are our lifeblood. I must take a moment to really thank every single one who has come on board Meraki TV. We’ve had sponsors who really didn’t need to advertise do so just to support our ideals. We even had one small business buy just one small ad; that was all they could afford but they wanted to help us get off the ground.

We’re a community show with no funding and we pay for our air time. Everything you have seen on Meraki TV has been aired through the donated blood, sweat and tears of our team. I’m honoured to have the Meraki TV team, they are professional, passionate and generous with their time and talent because they truly believe in what it is we’re trying to create here.

Our sponsors also understand that Greeks love to buy from Greeks, and they love good value and quality – that’s why they advertise with us. They know that Meraki TV is a great way for them to reach the discerning Greek market; they are our everything, and the best way to support us is to support our sponsors.

BC: Finally, any funny stories or highlights over the last two years?
AS: A personal highlight for me was interviewing Christos Dantis. The guy is an absolute legend in Greek music – he’s written half of the hits of the last 20 years and he was generous in our interview. It’s nice when you’re a massive fan and you meet your idol and walk away an even bigger fan!

Also, the day we went to interview Angelo Tsarouchas and we managed to get him locked out of his hotel room. He was great about it!

Then there was that time we filmed Helen’s Kouzina on a 43 degree day in a room with no air conditioning and closed windows because it was very loud outside. Poor Helen had to have a towel under the table in between shots to wipe the sweat off her.

Meraki TV airs from Monday, April 18 @ 7.00 pm on Foxtel Aurora Channel 183.

source:Neos Kosmos

Champions League and Europa League semi-finals fixtures

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PEP Guardiola avoided his future employers as Manchester City were on Friday drawn to play Real Madrid in the semi-finals of the Champions League while Atletico Madrid will face the Spaniard’s Bayern Munich.

Jurgen Klopp’s Liverpool earned a Europa League semi-final against Villarreal from their heroic comeback against his former side Borussia Dortmund.

Defending champions Sevilla face Ukraine’s Shakhtar Donetsk in the second semi-final drawn Friday.

The first leg of the Champions League semi-finals will be played on April 26-27, with the second leg scheduled for May 3-4. The final will take place at Milan’s San Siro stadium on May 28.

For outgoing Manchester City boss Manuel Pellegrini, the semi-final will be a return to the club he managed in 2009-10.

City’s only games against Real, unbeaten in their last eight games against English clubs and in the semi-finals for a record sixth successive time, were in the 2012-13 group stage. They drew 1-1 at home and lost 3-2 away.

Atletico, the Diego Simeone-coached team that knocked out defending champions Barcelona in the quarter-finals, and Bayern have previously met once in European action, in the 1974 final, the Bundesliga side running out 4-0 winners in the replay following an initial 1-1 draw.

Liverpool, who hit back from 2-0 and 3-1 down to beat Borussia 4-3 and progress into the Europa League semis 5-4 on aggregate, have never played Villarreal before.

Sevilla ousted fellow Spaniards Athletic Bilbao on penalties in Thursday’s quarter-final in their bid to win a third consecutive Europa League.

The final is set for Basel, Switzerland, on May 18. The winners will get a place in next season’s Champions League group stages.

Liverpool are the only unbeaten side left in the competition, and goals from centre-backs Mamadou Sakho and Dejan Lovren completed one of the great Anfield comebacks against Dortmund.

The first leg will be played in Villareal on April 28, with The Yellow Submarine heading to Merseyside for the return leg on May 5.

The Spanish outfit, currently fourth in La Liga, are looking to reach their maiden major European final, after Europa League last-four defeats in 2004 and 2011 and a Champions League semi-final loss in 2006.

In stark contrast, Liverpool are attempting to win their ninth major continental trophy, and in the process, draw level with Sevilla as the competition’s record four-time winners.

Sevilla’s quartet of titles have all come in the last decade, with victory against Espanyol in 2007 making them just the second club after Real Madrid to win the competition in successive years.

They backed that performance up by repeating the feat 11 months ago against Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk, and now they have another Ukrainian outfit in Shakhtar standing in their way.

The first leg will be played in Seville, before 2009 champions Shakhtar host the second game in Lviv. The country’s civil war has forced them to play away from their home city.

source:foxsports.com.au

Champion’s League:Μάντσεστερ Σίτι-Ρεάλ και Ατλέτικο-Μπάγερν, οι ημιτελικοί

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Δύο πολύ μεγάλα ζευγάρια ανέδειξε, όπως αναμένονταν άλλωστε, η κληρωτίδα για την ημιτελική φάση του Champions League.

Μάντσεστερ Σίτι-Ρεάλ Μαδρίτης και Ατλέτικο Μαδρίτης-Μπάγερν Μονάχου θα διασταυρώσουν τα ξίφη τους για την πρόκριση στον τελικό του Μιλάνου που θα γίνει στις 28 Μαΐου.

Οι πρώτοι αγώνες θα διεξαχθούν 26/27 Απριλίου και οι επαναληπτικοί στις 3/4 Μαΐου.

Περισσότερα σε λίγο…

Στις 13.30 ξεκινά η κλήρωση του Europa League, όπου συμμετέχουν Λίβερπουλ, Σεβίλλη, Βιγιαρεάλ και Σαχτάρ Ντόνετσκ.

Επίσης δεν υπάρχουν περιορισμοί, ενώ θα καθοριστεί και ο γηπεδούχος του τελικού της Βασιλείας (18/5).

Πηγή:in.gr

With migrant mission to Greece, pope pushes Orthodoxy

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When Pope Francis and Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew I, the spiritual leader of the world’s Orthodox Christians, visit migrants on the Greek island of Lesbos this weekend, they’ll be doing more than sending a political message about the need to welcome refugees.

Christianity’s two most important leaders, still officially divided by a thousand-year schism, will be speaking with an increasingly unified voice that has gone beyond the realm of religion to confronting pressing issues such as climate change and humanitarian crises around the globe.

The visit, which comes on the heels of Francis’ historic meeting with the head of the Russian Orthodox Church, is evidence of an increasingly important Catholic-Orthodox partnership that has been strengthened by shared concern for Christians being exterminated by Islamic extremists in the lands of Jesus’ birth.

Francis has called these indiscriminate attacks on Christians – Catholic, Orthodox and others – an “ecumenism of blood,” and it wouldn’t be surprising if he uses the term again on Lesvos when he meets with refugees fleeing Syria, Iraq and elsewhere.

“The ecumenical patriarch and popes for the last generation have increasingly begun to speak together on issues of common concern,” said George Demacopoulos, chair of Orthodox Christian studies at the Jesuit-run Fordham University in New York. “What you have here is a more specific case: You have the uniqueness of Pope Francis and the ecumenical patriarch at a tipping point in historical and European events.”

According to the Greek organizers, Francis and Bartholomew will visit with new arrivals at Lesvos’ Moria refugee registration center, which has essentially been turned into a detention center for refugees slated for deportation under the controversial EU-Turkey plan, which calls for new arrivals in Greece to be returned to Turkey. From Moria, Francis, Bartholomew and the head of the Church of Greece, Athens Archbishop Ieronymos, will visit the port in Mytilene, the island’s capital, to meet residents and hold a prayer service.

“It’s an extraordinary occasion,” said Cardinal Peter Turkson, head of the Vatican’s justice and peace office. “It’s a historic event because something like this has never happened before.”

Francis told his weekly general audience Wednesday that he and his Orthodox “brothers” were going “to express the closeness and solidarity to both the refugees and the citizens of Lesvos and the entire Greek people, who have been so generous in their welcome.”

The Catholic and Orthodox Churches split in 1054 in a dispute over papal power, among other things. The Second Vatican Council’s call for greater Catholic outreach to other Christians resulted in Pope Paul VIs historic meeting with the spiritual leader of the world’s Orthodox, Ecumenical Patriarch Athenagoras, in Jerusalem in 1964.

In 2014, Francis and Bartholomew marked the 50th anniversary of that event with a meeting in Jerusalem, which was followed by Francis’ visit to Istanbul later that year. The two men clearly get along well: Francis cited Bartholomew’s environmental writings in his own 2015 ecological encyclical – a first for a pope.

Bartholomew is the Istanbul-based “first among equals” in global Orthodoxy. The Greek church is independent of the patriarchate, one of the self-governing, “auto-cephalous” Orthodox churches that also include the Russian, Bulgarian and Serbian churches. While the Greek church and Ecumenical Patriarchate get along, the Greek church has been far less cozy with the Vatican.

Not so long ago, the Greek church adamantly opposed a papal visit.

When St. John Paul II toured Greece in 2001, the first pope to do so since the Great Schism, he was met with howls of protest by Greeks who considered it a Roman Catholic attempt to establish authority over the Orthodox Church. Orthodox monks and nuns prayed through the night to stop the visit, ordinary Orthodox took to the streets to protest and monastery bells tolled in mourning.

There was even a diplomatic standoff over whether John Paul would kiss the ground upon his arrival, as was his custom upon landing in a foreign country. In the end, he did kiss a pot of soil.

More importantly, John Paul issued a sweeping apology upon arrival in Athens for the “sins of action and omission” by Roman Catholics against Orthodox, including the Crusades-era sacking of Constantinople, the center of Greek Byzantium.

Fifteen years later, there has been no hint of protest at Francis’ visit.

And Catholic-Orthodox relations are clearly getting stronger: Bartholomew became the first ecumenical patriarch since the Great Schism to attend the installation of a pope when he was a guest of honor at Francis’ 2013 installation Mass. Francis recently met with the head of the Russian Orthodox Church, Patriarch Kirill, the first-ever meeting between a pope and a Russian patriarch.

A delegation from the Vatican and the Moscow Patriarchate recently returned from Syria on a humanitarian aid mission that drew up a list of Christian sites that need to be repaired, evidence that even with the most estranged Orthodox church, Francis is finding common cause.

That said, Francis isn’t visiting Greece on an official state visit but rather on a humanitarian mission to a Greek island, and just for a few hours.

In an indication of the delicate protocol issues at play, both diplomatic and ecclesial, theres no shared version of how the visit came off.

Bartholomew’s office said he had invited Francis to join him in Lesbos via letter on March 30.

The Holy Synod of the Church of Greece, the decision-making body of the Greek church, said Francis had asked to come to Greece to highlight the plight of refugees, that the synod had proposed he visit Lesvos and invited Bartholomew to come along.

The Vatican said Francis had accepted an invitation from Bartholomew and the Greek president, with no mention of the Greek Orthodox Church.

“The reality was that this was the patriarch’s idea,” said Demacopoulos. “The pro-forma is that he had to go through the archbishop of Athens and the state of Greece to make it happen.”