The gamecock. (Columbia, S.C.) 1908-2006, January 09, 2006, Image 8
Gunman who shot Pope John Paul to be Jreedfrom Turkish prison
• The Associated Press
Mehmet Ali Agca, Turkish gunman who shot Pope John Paul II in 1981, during his trial
in Istanbul, Turkey, in this Dec. 18, 2000 file photo. Agca is expected to be released
from his Istanbul prison as early as Monday after completing his sentence, Anatolia news
agency reported Sunday.
“He was eligible to be
released on parole because
he had no disciplinary
problems,” Demirbag said.
The semiofficial Anatolia
news agency suggested that
Agca was expected to be
immediately enlisted by the
military for obligatory service
because he had dodged the
draft. However, it was not
clear if that would happen
because the military generally
only accepts conscripts
younger than 41.
Turkish paramilitary police
were expected to take Agca
first to a local military station
and then to a military hospital
in Istanbul for a medical
check, a routine procedure.
Vatican spokesman
Joaquin Navarro-Valls said
the Vatican would defer to
the judgment of the Turkish
tribunal.
“The Holy See has learned
only from news agencies
of the news of the possible
freedom of Ali Agca,” he said
in a brief statement. “The
Holy See, before a problem
of a judicial nature, submits to
the decisions of the tribunals
involved in this matter.”
Agca’s sister, Fatma Agca,
said she also was surprised.
“We did not hear it,”
Fatma Agca told the AP
from the family home in the
southeastern city of Malatya.
In one of the most famous
moments of his papacy, John
Paul personally pardoned
Agca 2 1/2 years after the
attack, sitting face-to-face
and almost touching knees
with his attacker during a 21
minute private meeting in a
prison cell in Rome.
John Paul called his prison
visit “a historic day in my life
as a man, a Christian, as a
bishop and bishop of Rome,”
and he added that Agca had
expressed repentance for the
attack.
I he Lord gave us the
grace to be able to meet
each other as men and as
brothers,” the pope said.
Reporters were barred but
a Vatican film showed that
Agca bent and kissed the
pope’s ring at the start of the
meeting and shook his hand
after they sat down.
The pope also had
pardoned Agca from his
hospital bed five days after
the shooting.
Upon his return to Turkey
from Italy, Agca immediately
was sent to prison to serve a 10
year sentence for murdering
the Turkish journalist Abdi
Ipekci in 1979. He was
separately sentenced to seven
years and four months for
two robberies in Turkey the
same year.
An Istanbul court ruled in
2004 that Agca should only
serve the longest sentence
— his conviction for killing
Ipekci.
Demirbag, explaining the
court decision, said Agca
was sentenced to life in
prison, which amounts to 36
years under Turkish law, for
the killing. He served less
than six months in Turkish
prison in that case before he
escaped, resurfacing in 1981
in Rome.
An amnesty in 2000
deducted 10 more years from
his time, leaving some 25
1/2 years to be served, the
lawyer said. The court last
week further deducted his 20
years in prison in Italy based
on a new article in the penal
code.
Agca reportedly identified
with the Gray Wolves, a far
right-wing militant group
that fought street battles
against leftists in the 1970s.
He first confessed to killing
Ipekci, one of the country’s
most prominent left-wing
newspaper columnists,
but later retracted his
statements.
in a iviarcn interview witn
the Italian daily newspaper
La Repubblica, Agca made
contradictory remarks about
his attempt on John Paul’s
life. He initially said Vatican
prelates helped him carry out
the shooting, adding: “The
devil is within the Vatican.”
He then reportedly said
in the same interview that
“nobody in the world knew
of my attempt.”
There has been speculation
that agents from Bulgaria
helped plot the assassination
attempt because of that
country’s ties with the Soviet
KGB, which reportedly was
alarmed by the pope’s support
for the Solidarity trade union
in Poland.
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Selcan Hacaoglu
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
ANKARA, Turkey — The
man who shot Pope John
Paul II in 1981 will be
released from prison this
week after a court decided he
had completed his sentence
for the attack on the pontiff
and other crimes — a ruling
that took the Vatican by
surprise.
Mehmet Ali Agca was
extradited to Turkey in 2000
after serving almost 20 years
in Italy for shooting and
wounding the pope in St.
Peter’s Square in Rome. His
motive for shooting John
Paul in the abdomen on May
13, 1981, remains unclear.
Agca, 47, was to be released
on parole Thursday, his
lawyer, Mustafa Demirbag
told The Associated Press by
telephone.
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