Pope Francis will make the first trip by a pontiff in 10 years to the tiny Mediterranean island nation of Malta in May, where he is expected to defend the rights of migrants trying to reach Europe.
The Vatican said on Monday the pope will visit the country, which lies between Sicily and North Africa, on May 31.
Malta has been at the center of several disputes with Italy and other European nations over which one should take migrants rescued in the Mediterranean by ships from non-governmental organizations (NGOs).
Like Italy, it has sometimes closed its ports to humanitarian ships that have rescued migrants, saying they should be shared among EU nations.
The pope, who has made defense of migrants a major part of his papacy and has often called the Mediterranean a cemetery, has criticized the closing of ports.
Politically, the island is still reeling from the killing of investigative journalist Daphne
Caruana Galizia in a car bombing in 2017. Francis may pay tribute to her, according to a Vatican source.
Malta is important in the history of Christianity because a ship carrying St. Paul to Rome was shipwrecked there in about the year 60 AD while he was being taken to Rome.
Francis's trip to Malta is also seen as a tribute to its archbishop Charles Scicluna, who is the Vatican's most experienced sexual abuse investigator.
Scicluna's investigations have led to the defrocking of some of the Church's most notorious pedophiles in Mexico, Chile and other countries.
Scicluna has also been in the front line in the defense of migrants, sometimes criticizing government policies. In 2017 he visited the Phoenix, one of the NGO-run rescue ships plying the waters of the southern Mediterranean to save migrants from drowning.
Former pope Benedict XVI visited Malta in 2010 and Pope John Paul II went there in 1990 and 2001.