Mehmet Ali Agca released
Shooting of John Paul II: The man who nearly killed the Pope
As Mehmet Ali Agca spends his first night as a free man in 25 years, Rupert Cornwell recalls the day shots rang out in Rome, leaving one of the greatest conspiracy riddles of the 20th century
Independent 13 January 2006
The late spring afternoon was as beautiful as only Rome can make them. It was Wednesday, 13 May 1981, and the Polish Pope, elected less than three years earlier, was on his way to his regular weekly public audience, being driven in his white - and then unarmoured - popemobile, through a crowd of 20,000 worshippers. It was a routine occasion, yet imbued with the excitement created by this Pontiff, who was already transforming the way the world saw his office.
Suddenly, at 5.17pm, shots rang out. Two bullets struck John Paul II in the stomach. The Pope slumped back, blood staining his white cassock.
For an instant, there was only silence. But disbelief turned to horror, then panic. Cries rang out: "Hanno sparato il Papa! Hanno sparato il Papa! [They've shot the Pope]". A minute later, police grabbed a man fleeing from the square. He was a young Turk named Mehmet Ali Agca - and one of the 20th century's great mysteries had begun.
A letter found in Agca's pocket did little to elucidate matters. "I, Agca, have killed the Pope so that the world may know of the thousands of victims of imperialism," it said. In the event, of course, John Paul II was not killed and, after a five-hour operation, went on to make a full recovery. Yesterday, normality of a sort returned for Mr Agca.
After a quarter of a century behind bars, a greying Mr Agca, now 48, emerged from a jail in Istanbul, a free man at last, in theory. He had been sentenced in Italy to life imprisonment, but at the Pope's instigation, he was released in 2000 as part of a millennial amnesty by the Rome government. Agca was sent back to Turkey to serve the remainder of a 10-year sentence for his part in the murder of a liberal journalist in the late 1970s.
But why did this Turkish petty criminal try to kill the supreme symbol of the Catholic faith? From his note, it seemed as if he had acted alone. But could he have acted alone? In Washington and some other Western capitals, the authorities quickly convinced themselves he had not. This surely was the work of the Soviet KGB, acting through its catspaws in the Darzavna Sigurnost, the intelligence service of Bulgaria, Moscow's most faithful and unquestioning ally in the Eastern Bloc. At first glance, the theory made eminent sense.
The Cold War was at its coldest. Poland, the Pope's homeland, was in turmoil. Millions had turned out to welcome him during his June 1979 visit; led by the Solidarity trade union, the grievances of shipyard workers in Gdansk were turning into full-scale insurrection against the Communist regime imposed by Moscow. The following summer, the Pope held an emotional meeting at the Vatican with Lech Walesa, the Solidarity leader - sealing the Pontiff's commitment to a free, Christian Poland.
By the time of Agca's attempt on his life, the chaos had only deepened. Warsaw Pact forces were conducting exercises on Poland's borders, and a Soviet-led invasion seemed imminent. The murder of the Pope, if the tracks could be suitably muddied, must have been an attractive proposition to Yuri Andropov, the head of the KGB (and mastermind of the Soviet intervention in Hungary in 1956). It would remove the chief spiritual and moral rallying figure for the Polish resistance.
There was supporting circumstantial evidence too. Agca's travels after an escape he made in 1979 had taken him on several occasions to Bulgaria, where he could have been recruited for his lethal mission. A couple of well-documented books, most notably Time of the Assassins by the journalist and acknowledged terrorism specialist Claire Sterling, made the case powerfully for a Bulgarian-Turkish plot.
Alas, despite the best efforts of the Reagan administration, no flesh was ever put on the bones of this "Bulgarian connection". In March last year, a few days before the Pope died, reports circulated in Italy that the Darzavna Sigurnost was about to open its archives - but nothing to date has emerged.
Instead it seems, if anything, that the "Bulgarian connection" was little more than disinformatsya, put about this time by the West to pressurise its adversary in Moscow. In October 1991, a senior CIA analyst on Soviet affairs told a Senate committee that the agency had earlier come up with no hard evidence of Soviet involvement - only for his superiors to alter the report's main judgments and "stack the deck" in favour of Russian complicity. Sections of the report expressing doubts and counter-arguments were erased, and the finished project sent to the White House and the Pentagon, avid to nail the Kremlin. (Any similarities with the CIA's recent handling of evidence for Iraq's supposed WMD programme are, of course, coincidental.)
The ploy, however, worked brilliantly. It reinforced Ronald Reagan's preferred image of the Soviet Union as an "evil empire" (compare the "axis of evil" vilified by the current occupant of the White House), and - some say - distracted attention from the ties between the CIA and unsavoury elements on the Turkish ultra-nationalist right.
Prosecutors in Italy (itself described by some at the time as "the Bulgaria of Nato") vigorously pursued the theory. But in 1986 the trial of three Bulgarians and three Turks allegedly involved in a vast conspiracy to kill the Pope ended with blanket acquittals for lack of evidence. In the courtroom Agca depicted himself not as a latter-day Ramon Mercader, sent by Stalin to assassinate Leon Trotsky in Mexico City in 1940, but as a Messiah, the re-incarnation of Jesus Christ.
Two days after John Paul II's death last year, Agca sent a letter from his Turkish prison asking to be allowed to attend the funeral. "The divine plan has come to its conclusion," he wrote, implying that the assassination attempt was part of God's will. His ramblings only increased the confusion. Was Agca a sane man pretending to be mad - or a holy fool with a veneer of sanity?
The former Italian magistrate Ferdinando Imposimato, the chief prosecutor in the Agca case, is convinced of the former. He insists that the Turk had been nobbled by the Bulgarian and KGB agents in 1983 when he was being held at Rebibbia prison in Rome, and was persuaded to change his story.
"I think the Turkish government should guarantee Agca's security because he knows so many secrets and may be killed," Mr Imposimato said this week. "The best thing would be to keep him in jail."
But events since suggest the latter. In 1983 the Pope visited Agca in his prison cell and forgave him. In 2002, during a visit to Bulgaria, he expressed his conviction that that country was not involved. Agca has repeatedly portrayed himself as a divine agent. More recently, he has claimed to be the fulfilment of the so-called "Third Secret of Fatima", allegedly revealed by the Madonna to three shepherds near the Portuguese town of that name in 1917 - predicting that a pope would be assassinated, part of a global war between Islam and Christianity.
Of that, more in a moment. Of more practical relevance, nothing that has emerged from KGB or Bulgarian archives since the collapse in 1991 of the Soviet Union has indicated that Sofia or Moscow had a hand in events.
Unsatisfying it may be for conspiracy theorists, but the preponderance of evidence suggests that Agca, like Lee Harvey Oswald, acted alone. And just like JFK's assassin, he seems too small for the earth-shattering deed he came within an ace of accomplishing.
If anyone plotted to kill John Paul II, it was almost certainly Turkish extremists, perhaps linked to Ankara's intelligence services, but by no means controlled by them. In that sense, the assassination attempt was a classic case of "blowback" - the unintended consequences of covert action.
At about the same time, the CIA was arming the Afghan mujaheddin in their war with Moscow. A dozen years later, it ended up with Osama bin Laden.
Almost a quarter of a century later, Mehmet Ali Agca the man remains as much of a mystery as that afternoon in St Peter's Square. Back then he was a 23-year-old drug peddler, hoodlum and part-time terrorist who identified with the Grey Wolves, a militant far-right group with links to the drugs trade that frequently clashed with leftists.
In 1979 he had escaped from jail where he was serving a 10-year sentence in connection with the killing of the liberal journalist Abdi Ipekci, who had been investigating links between Turkey's government and organised crime and far-right extremists. Agca went to Europe and North Africa, using at least two expertly forged passports.
He dressed well and never seemed short of money. When he arrived in Palermo, Sicily, on a Tunisian ferry and checked into a hotel on the evening of 13 December 1980, the owner recalled him as "a distinguished, well-mannered person." That day six months later he seemed, according to a news agency report, "a modishly dressed young tourist" in the Roman sunshine - until he pulled out a 9mm pistol and fired it at the Pope.
But if Agca wasn't the pawn of a superpower, was he a figure of far greater contemporary relevance, a harbinger of the war of civilisations, between Christianity and Islam, that some say is now coming to pass? At this point, re-enter the "Fatima connection". The theory is based on the date, 13 May. On that day in 1917, Mary the Mother of God is said to have appeared to the three shepherds near Fatima.
On another 13 May, exactly 64 years later, the Pope was shot - in conformity, it would later be argued, with the "Third Secret". Pope John Paul II, it has been further argued, was especially devoted to Mary, and visited the shrine at Fatima to thank her for interceding to save his life on 13 May 1981, in what he insisted was a divine miracle.
But wait. Is not Fatima merely the Portuguese for Fatma, the name of one of the daughters of the Prophet Mohamed, dating back to when the Moors occupied the country? For Islamic fundamentalists, might not the appearance of the Madonna be a deliberate "provocation" by the Christian infidels, that had to be punished by the killing of a Pope? The name of Agca's mother, it might be added, is Fatma.
Then stir in the tale of Emanuela Orlandi, the teenage daughter of a Vatican employee who was abducted in 1983. Her fate is still unknown. But some believe she was kidnapped to send a message to the Italian and Vatican authorities to keep quiet about the Agca case. In 2001 a skull, which might have been hers, was left at a church close to where she used to live. And the date of this macabre delivery? Naturally, 13 May.
Like the mystery of Agca, the Orlandi case remains unsolved, a footnote to one of the great riddles of the late 20th century. The fate of its protagonist, free after spending more than half his life behind bars, is unclear. Such is the outrage in Turkey at his release that his case may be reviewed. If he remains free, he may have to perform the military service he dodged a couple of decades ago. But the full truth about what happened on that 13 May of 1981 may never be known.
Rupert Cornwell was a correspondent in Rome in 1981
Gunman who shot Pope might be sent back to prison
AP
Independent 13 January 2006
Mehmet Ali Agca, the Turkish gunman who shot Pope John Paul II, might have been released from prison by mistake and might return to his cell to serve at least 11 more months, a newspaper said today, quoting the country's justice minister.
Justice Minister Cemil Cicek ordered a review of Agca's complicated case hours after the gunman was released from prison yesterday to see whether any errors were committed in freeing him amid strong criticism.
Agca would remain free until an appeals court reviewed the case.
"According to preliminary information, I think the critical point is for how long Agca served time in Italy," the Milliyet newspaper quoted Cicek as saying in an interview.
Cicek was quoted as saying that a local judge, who decided Agca's release, calculated he served "20 years," in Italy, but had not explicitly "stated dates when he entered and released from prison."
"We will find that out by examining his file, for example if he served 19 years and not 20 years, then Agca must serve one more year in Turkey," Cicek said.
Agca spent 19 years and one month in prison in Italy between the day he was captured after he shot the pope on May 13, 1981 in Rome and his extradition to Turkey on June 14, 2000.
According to that calculation, Agca must serve 11 more months in prison, the newspaper said.
Istanbul Prison Releases Turk Who Shot Pope
By SEBNEM ARSU
New York Times January 13, 2006
ISTANBUL, Jan. 12 - Mehmet Ali Agca, the man who shot Pope John Paul II walked out of Kartal prison in Istanbul a free man early Thursday, stepping from a tight security cordon at the gate into a waiting car that was showered with flowers by his supporters as it drove away.
Wearing a blue sweater and jeans, Mr. Agca looked tense at his first stop, the local military office, where he was obliged to report for the mandatory military service he missed over many years on the run and in jail. Another crowd awaited him as he stepped out of the building. His supporters whistled, clapped and displayed a large Turkish flag as the car moved slowly through the crowd.
Turkey's justice minister, Cemil Cicek, sharply criticized Mr. Agca's release, which was ordered by a local court. "These amnesties offend the public conscience and hurt already wounded victims," he said. He ordered a review of the decision, but said Mr. Agca would remain free during the appeals process.
A 48-year-old native of Malatya, a town in eastern Turkey, Mr. Agca has long been associated with an ultranationalist group called the Gray Wolves and also with members of the Turkish criminal underworld. He has never admitted any association with such groups, and over the course of more than 120 interrogations has constantly frustrated investigators with contradictory statements about his motivations for shooting the pope.
In addition to the assassination attempt in 1981, he was convicted in the 1979 killing of Abdi Ipekci, a prominent liberal journalist, and of escaping from prison soon afterward, as well as two lesser offenses.
He was sentenced to 36 years in prison for the five crimes. Turkish courts, however, counted the 19 years that he spent in Italian custody before being pardoned and applied a reduction based on a general amnesty law passed in 2000. So they decided that he should be released after having spent 5 years, 6 months and 27 days in Turkish jails.
Mr. Agca's release was also strongly criticized by the Ipekci family. "We are at a point where words are meaningless," said Turgut Kazan, a lawyer for the family. "Justice has been slaughtered. But we will continue our way to justice at all costs because this is an unjust end, and for us, it is unacceptable."
Freedom could be fleeting for man who shot the Pope
By Steve Bryant in Istanbul
The Times 13 January 2006
THE man who shot and wounded Pope John Paul II was released yesterday after spending 25 years behind bars, but Mehmet Ali Agca’s freedom may prove short-lived.
Turkish ultra-nationalist supporters in sharp suits cast red and yellow flowers over Mr Agca’s car as he swept out of Kartal prison in Istanbul.
But not everyone shared their happiness, and within hours of Mr Agca’s release the Turkish Justice Ministry and the Armed Forces were both threatening to curtail his new-found liberty.
Mr Agca, 48, served 19 years in an Italian jail for his 1981 attempt on the Pope’s life before he was pardoned at the Pope’s request and extradited to Turkey.
He was promptly reimprisoned in his homeland, where he faced 36 years in jail for two armed robberies and the 1979 murder of Abdi Ipekci, a newspaper editor. But recent changes to Turkey’s penal code and an amnesty passed in late 2000 cut that term and, most controversially, allowed Mr Agca to count time served in Italy for the papal attack against his Turkish sentence.
Mr Agca’s early release angered many who remember Turkey’s turbulent 1970s and 1980s. Mr Agca had ties with the ultra-nationalist “Grey Wolves” whose fights with leftists turned many cities into battlegrounds and who killed many intellectuals and academics. The Milliyet newspaper, which Mr Ipekci once edited, called Mr Agca’s release a day of shame.
Stung by the criticism, Cemil Cicek, the Justice Minister, said that he was ordering a full review of Mr Agca’s release. “The law can sometimes make mistakes,” he said.
A Court of Appeals review could take months, but Mr Agca is likely to hear first from military doctors who examined him immediately after his release to see if he is capable of military service. Mr Agca has never performed the military service that is compulsory for Turkish men.
He was whisked from jail to a military recruitment office where he claimed that he did not feel he was not physically capable of serving. A small group of Turkish communists jeered and booed as Mr Agca arrived at a military hospital for tests.
At no point during a day of shuffling from between offices and military hospitals did Mr Agca, wearing blue jeans and a blue sweater, speak to the press, frustrating those who had hoped he would speak about his attempt to assassinate the Pope in St Peter’s Square.
Well aware of the fascination that surrounds him, the nearest he came to a comment was to rush towards reporters brandishing a copy of Time magazine from 1983 showing Mr Agca and Pope John Paul II shaking hands. “Why forgive?” the headline read.
Mr Agca has never offered a consistent explanation of his actions, and theories abound that he was an agent for a wider conspiracy, perhaps involving Eastern European security forces. At an Italian trial in 1986, prosecutors failed to prove charges that Bulgarian secret services had hired Mr Agca to kill the anti-communist Pope on behalf of the Soviet Union.
Until the military service issue is resolved, Mr Agca must report to a police station twice a day. He has registered a house in Istanbul as his address.
As Mehmet Ali Agca spends his first night as a free man in 25 years, Rupert Cornwell recalls the day shots rang out in Rome, leaving one of the greatest conspiracy riddles of the 20th century
Independent 13 January 2006
The late spring afternoon was as beautiful as only Rome can make them. It was Wednesday, 13 May 1981, and the Polish Pope, elected less than three years earlier, was on his way to his regular weekly public audience, being driven in his white - and then unarmoured - popemobile, through a crowd of 20,000 worshippers. It was a routine occasion, yet imbued with the excitement created by this Pontiff, who was already transforming the way the world saw his office.
Suddenly, at 5.17pm, shots rang out. Two bullets struck John Paul II in the stomach. The Pope slumped back, blood staining his white cassock.
For an instant, there was only silence. But disbelief turned to horror, then panic. Cries rang out: "Hanno sparato il Papa! Hanno sparato il Papa! [They've shot the Pope]". A minute later, police grabbed a man fleeing from the square. He was a young Turk named Mehmet Ali Agca - and one of the 20th century's great mysteries had begun.
A letter found in Agca's pocket did little to elucidate matters. "I, Agca, have killed the Pope so that the world may know of the thousands of victims of imperialism," it said. In the event, of course, John Paul II was not killed and, after a five-hour operation, went on to make a full recovery. Yesterday, normality of a sort returned for Mr Agca.
After a quarter of a century behind bars, a greying Mr Agca, now 48, emerged from a jail in Istanbul, a free man at last, in theory. He had been sentenced in Italy to life imprisonment, but at the Pope's instigation, he was released in 2000 as part of a millennial amnesty by the Rome government. Agca was sent back to Turkey to serve the remainder of a 10-year sentence for his part in the murder of a liberal journalist in the late 1970s.
But why did this Turkish petty criminal try to kill the supreme symbol of the Catholic faith? From his note, it seemed as if he had acted alone. But could he have acted alone? In Washington and some other Western capitals, the authorities quickly convinced themselves he had not. This surely was the work of the Soviet KGB, acting through its catspaws in the Darzavna Sigurnost, the intelligence service of Bulgaria, Moscow's most faithful and unquestioning ally in the Eastern Bloc. At first glance, the theory made eminent sense.
The Cold War was at its coldest. Poland, the Pope's homeland, was in turmoil. Millions had turned out to welcome him during his June 1979 visit; led by the Solidarity trade union, the grievances of shipyard workers in Gdansk were turning into full-scale insurrection against the Communist regime imposed by Moscow. The following summer, the Pope held an emotional meeting at the Vatican with Lech Walesa, the Solidarity leader - sealing the Pontiff's commitment to a free, Christian Poland.
By the time of Agca's attempt on his life, the chaos had only deepened. Warsaw Pact forces were conducting exercises on Poland's borders, and a Soviet-led invasion seemed imminent. The murder of the Pope, if the tracks could be suitably muddied, must have been an attractive proposition to Yuri Andropov, the head of the KGB (and mastermind of the Soviet intervention in Hungary in 1956). It would remove the chief spiritual and moral rallying figure for the Polish resistance.
There was supporting circumstantial evidence too. Agca's travels after an escape he made in 1979 had taken him on several occasions to Bulgaria, where he could have been recruited for his lethal mission. A couple of well-documented books, most notably Time of the Assassins by the journalist and acknowledged terrorism specialist Claire Sterling, made the case powerfully for a Bulgarian-Turkish plot.
Alas, despite the best efforts of the Reagan administration, no flesh was ever put on the bones of this "Bulgarian connection". In March last year, a few days before the Pope died, reports circulated in Italy that the Darzavna Sigurnost was about to open its archives - but nothing to date has emerged.
Instead it seems, if anything, that the "Bulgarian connection" was little more than disinformatsya, put about this time by the West to pressurise its adversary in Moscow. In October 1991, a senior CIA analyst on Soviet affairs told a Senate committee that the agency had earlier come up with no hard evidence of Soviet involvement - only for his superiors to alter the report's main judgments and "stack the deck" in favour of Russian complicity. Sections of the report expressing doubts and counter-arguments were erased, and the finished project sent to the White House and the Pentagon, avid to nail the Kremlin. (Any similarities with the CIA's recent handling of evidence for Iraq's supposed WMD programme are, of course, coincidental.)
The ploy, however, worked brilliantly. It reinforced Ronald Reagan's preferred image of the Soviet Union as an "evil empire" (compare the "axis of evil" vilified by the current occupant of the White House), and - some say - distracted attention from the ties between the CIA and unsavoury elements on the Turkish ultra-nationalist right.
Prosecutors in Italy (itself described by some at the time as "the Bulgaria of Nato") vigorously pursued the theory. But in 1986 the trial of three Bulgarians and three Turks allegedly involved in a vast conspiracy to kill the Pope ended with blanket acquittals for lack of evidence. In the courtroom Agca depicted himself not as a latter-day Ramon Mercader, sent by Stalin to assassinate Leon Trotsky in Mexico City in 1940, but as a Messiah, the re-incarnation of Jesus Christ.
Two days after John Paul II's death last year, Agca sent a letter from his Turkish prison asking to be allowed to attend the funeral. "The divine plan has come to its conclusion," he wrote, implying that the assassination attempt was part of God's will. His ramblings only increased the confusion. Was Agca a sane man pretending to be mad - or a holy fool with a veneer of sanity?
The former Italian magistrate Ferdinando Imposimato, the chief prosecutor in the Agca case, is convinced of the former. He insists that the Turk had been nobbled by the Bulgarian and KGB agents in 1983 when he was being held at Rebibbia prison in Rome, and was persuaded to change his story.
"I think the Turkish government should guarantee Agca's security because he knows so many secrets and may be killed," Mr Imposimato said this week. "The best thing would be to keep him in jail."
But events since suggest the latter. In 1983 the Pope visited Agca in his prison cell and forgave him. In 2002, during a visit to Bulgaria, he expressed his conviction that that country was not involved. Agca has repeatedly portrayed himself as a divine agent. More recently, he has claimed to be the fulfilment of the so-called "Third Secret of Fatima", allegedly revealed by the Madonna to three shepherds near the Portuguese town of that name in 1917 - predicting that a pope would be assassinated, part of a global war between Islam and Christianity.
Of that, more in a moment. Of more practical relevance, nothing that has emerged from KGB or Bulgarian archives since the collapse in 1991 of the Soviet Union has indicated that Sofia or Moscow had a hand in events.
Unsatisfying it may be for conspiracy theorists, but the preponderance of evidence suggests that Agca, like Lee Harvey Oswald, acted alone. And just like JFK's assassin, he seems too small for the earth-shattering deed he came within an ace of accomplishing.
If anyone plotted to kill John Paul II, it was almost certainly Turkish extremists, perhaps linked to Ankara's intelligence services, but by no means controlled by them. In that sense, the assassination attempt was a classic case of "blowback" - the unintended consequences of covert action.
At about the same time, the CIA was arming the Afghan mujaheddin in their war with Moscow. A dozen years later, it ended up with Osama bin Laden.
Almost a quarter of a century later, Mehmet Ali Agca the man remains as much of a mystery as that afternoon in St Peter's Square. Back then he was a 23-year-old drug peddler, hoodlum and part-time terrorist who identified with the Grey Wolves, a militant far-right group with links to the drugs trade that frequently clashed with leftists.
In 1979 he had escaped from jail where he was serving a 10-year sentence in connection with the killing of the liberal journalist Abdi Ipekci, who had been investigating links between Turkey's government and organised crime and far-right extremists. Agca went to Europe and North Africa, using at least two expertly forged passports.
He dressed well and never seemed short of money. When he arrived in Palermo, Sicily, on a Tunisian ferry and checked into a hotel on the evening of 13 December 1980, the owner recalled him as "a distinguished, well-mannered person." That day six months later he seemed, according to a news agency report, "a modishly dressed young tourist" in the Roman sunshine - until he pulled out a 9mm pistol and fired it at the Pope.
But if Agca wasn't the pawn of a superpower, was he a figure of far greater contemporary relevance, a harbinger of the war of civilisations, between Christianity and Islam, that some say is now coming to pass? At this point, re-enter the "Fatima connection". The theory is based on the date, 13 May. On that day in 1917, Mary the Mother of God is said to have appeared to the three shepherds near Fatima.
On another 13 May, exactly 64 years later, the Pope was shot - in conformity, it would later be argued, with the "Third Secret". Pope John Paul II, it has been further argued, was especially devoted to Mary, and visited the shrine at Fatima to thank her for interceding to save his life on 13 May 1981, in what he insisted was a divine miracle.
But wait. Is not Fatima merely the Portuguese for Fatma, the name of one of the daughters of the Prophet Mohamed, dating back to when the Moors occupied the country? For Islamic fundamentalists, might not the appearance of the Madonna be a deliberate "provocation" by the Christian infidels, that had to be punished by the killing of a Pope? The name of Agca's mother, it might be added, is Fatma.
Then stir in the tale of Emanuela Orlandi, the teenage daughter of a Vatican employee who was abducted in 1983. Her fate is still unknown. But some believe she was kidnapped to send a message to the Italian and Vatican authorities to keep quiet about the Agca case. In 2001 a skull, which might have been hers, was left at a church close to where she used to live. And the date of this macabre delivery? Naturally, 13 May.
Like the mystery of Agca, the Orlandi case remains unsolved, a footnote to one of the great riddles of the late 20th century. The fate of its protagonist, free after spending more than half his life behind bars, is unclear. Such is the outrage in Turkey at his release that his case may be reviewed. If he remains free, he may have to perform the military service he dodged a couple of decades ago. But the full truth about what happened on that 13 May of 1981 may never be known.
Rupert Cornwell was a correspondent in Rome in 1981
Gunman who shot Pope might be sent back to prison
AP
Independent 13 January 2006
Mehmet Ali Agca, the Turkish gunman who shot Pope John Paul II, might have been released from prison by mistake and might return to his cell to serve at least 11 more months, a newspaper said today, quoting the country's justice minister.
Justice Minister Cemil Cicek ordered a review of Agca's complicated case hours after the gunman was released from prison yesterday to see whether any errors were committed in freeing him amid strong criticism.
Agca would remain free until an appeals court reviewed the case.
"According to preliminary information, I think the critical point is for how long Agca served time in Italy," the Milliyet newspaper quoted Cicek as saying in an interview.
Cicek was quoted as saying that a local judge, who decided Agca's release, calculated he served "20 years," in Italy, but had not explicitly "stated dates when he entered and released from prison."
"We will find that out by examining his file, for example if he served 19 years and not 20 years, then Agca must serve one more year in Turkey," Cicek said.
Agca spent 19 years and one month in prison in Italy between the day he was captured after he shot the pope on May 13, 1981 in Rome and his extradition to Turkey on June 14, 2000.
According to that calculation, Agca must serve 11 more months in prison, the newspaper said.
Istanbul Prison Releases Turk Who Shot Pope
By SEBNEM ARSU
New York Times January 13, 2006
ISTANBUL, Jan. 12 - Mehmet Ali Agca, the man who shot Pope John Paul II walked out of Kartal prison in Istanbul a free man early Thursday, stepping from a tight security cordon at the gate into a waiting car that was showered with flowers by his supporters as it drove away.
Wearing a blue sweater and jeans, Mr. Agca looked tense at his first stop, the local military office, where he was obliged to report for the mandatory military service he missed over many years on the run and in jail. Another crowd awaited him as he stepped out of the building. His supporters whistled, clapped and displayed a large Turkish flag as the car moved slowly through the crowd.
Turkey's justice minister, Cemil Cicek, sharply criticized Mr. Agca's release, which was ordered by a local court. "These amnesties offend the public conscience and hurt already wounded victims," he said. He ordered a review of the decision, but said Mr. Agca would remain free during the appeals process.
A 48-year-old native of Malatya, a town in eastern Turkey, Mr. Agca has long been associated with an ultranationalist group called the Gray Wolves and also with members of the Turkish criminal underworld. He has never admitted any association with such groups, and over the course of more than 120 interrogations has constantly frustrated investigators with contradictory statements about his motivations for shooting the pope.
In addition to the assassination attempt in 1981, he was convicted in the 1979 killing of Abdi Ipekci, a prominent liberal journalist, and of escaping from prison soon afterward, as well as two lesser offenses.
He was sentenced to 36 years in prison for the five crimes. Turkish courts, however, counted the 19 years that he spent in Italian custody before being pardoned and applied a reduction based on a general amnesty law passed in 2000. So they decided that he should be released after having spent 5 years, 6 months and 27 days in Turkish jails.
Mr. Agca's release was also strongly criticized by the Ipekci family. "We are at a point where words are meaningless," said Turgut Kazan, a lawyer for the family. "Justice has been slaughtered. But we will continue our way to justice at all costs because this is an unjust end, and for us, it is unacceptable."
Freedom could be fleeting for man who shot the Pope
By Steve Bryant in Istanbul
The Times 13 January 2006
THE man who shot and wounded Pope John Paul II was released yesterday after spending 25 years behind bars, but Mehmet Ali Agca’s freedom may prove short-lived.
Turkish ultra-nationalist supporters in sharp suits cast red and yellow flowers over Mr Agca’s car as he swept out of Kartal prison in Istanbul.
But not everyone shared their happiness, and within hours of Mr Agca’s release the Turkish Justice Ministry and the Armed Forces were both threatening to curtail his new-found liberty.
Mr Agca, 48, served 19 years in an Italian jail for his 1981 attempt on the Pope’s life before he was pardoned at the Pope’s request and extradited to Turkey.
He was promptly reimprisoned in his homeland, where he faced 36 years in jail for two armed robberies and the 1979 murder of Abdi Ipekci, a newspaper editor. But recent changes to Turkey’s penal code and an amnesty passed in late 2000 cut that term and, most controversially, allowed Mr Agca to count time served in Italy for the papal attack against his Turkish sentence.
Mr Agca’s early release angered many who remember Turkey’s turbulent 1970s and 1980s. Mr Agca had ties with the ultra-nationalist “Grey Wolves” whose fights with leftists turned many cities into battlegrounds and who killed many intellectuals and academics. The Milliyet newspaper, which Mr Ipekci once edited, called Mr Agca’s release a day of shame.
Stung by the criticism, Cemil Cicek, the Justice Minister, said that he was ordering a full review of Mr Agca’s release. “The law can sometimes make mistakes,” he said.
A Court of Appeals review could take months, but Mr Agca is likely to hear first from military doctors who examined him immediately after his release to see if he is capable of military service. Mr Agca has never performed the military service that is compulsory for Turkish men.
He was whisked from jail to a military recruitment office where he claimed that he did not feel he was not physically capable of serving. A small group of Turkish communists jeered and booed as Mr Agca arrived at a military hospital for tests.
At no point during a day of shuffling from between offices and military hospitals did Mr Agca, wearing blue jeans and a blue sweater, speak to the press, frustrating those who had hoped he would speak about his attempt to assassinate the Pope in St Peter’s Square.
Well aware of the fascination that surrounds him, the nearest he came to a comment was to rush towards reporters brandishing a copy of Time magazine from 1983 showing Mr Agca and Pope John Paul II shaking hands. “Why forgive?” the headline read.
Mr Agca has never offered a consistent explanation of his actions, and theories abound that he was an agent for a wider conspiracy, perhaps involving Eastern European security forces. At an Italian trial in 1986, prosecutors failed to prove charges that Bulgarian secret services had hired Mr Agca to kill the anti-communist Pope on behalf of the Soviet Union.
Until the military service issue is resolved, Mr Agca must report to a police station twice a day. He has registered a house in Istanbul as his address.
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