On 1 February 1979, two members of the
ultra-nationalist Grey Wolves, and
Mehmet Ali Ağca (who later
shot Pope
John Paul II), murdered Abdi İpekçi in his car on the way back home from his office in front of his apartment building in Istanbul. Ağca was caught due to an informant and was sentenced to life in prison. After serving six months in a military prison in Istanbul, Ağca escaped with the help of military officers and the Grey Wolves, fleeing first to
Iran and then to
Bulgaria, which was then a base of operation for the Turkish mafia. According to reporter
Lucy Komisar, Mehmet Ali Ağca had collaborated with
Abdullah Çatlı in this 1979 murder, who "then reportedly helped organize Ağca's escape from the prison, and some have suggested Çatlı was even involved in the
Pope's assassination attempt". Ağca later became famous for his failed assassination attempt on Pope John Paul II on May 13, 1981. According to
Reuters, Ağca had "escaped with suspected help from sympathizers in the security services". Writer and politician
Çetin Altan, alleged that a journalist colleague who was a former admiral intelligence officer of the chiefs of staff, Sezai Orkunt, had informed him that the clandestine
Counter-Guerrilla murdered İpekçi at the behest of the CIA's station chief in Turkey. İpekçi had learned that the counter-guerrilla were inducting civilians into a clandestine anti-communist organization without the knowledge of the Turkish chief of staff. He knew that the counter-guerrilla were subordinate to the CIA, whose station chief at the time was Paul Henze. İpekçi thus asked Henze to stop the CIA's illegal activities. Other sources also name Henze as the instigator of İpekçi's murder. Abdi İpekçi was interred at the
Zincirlikuyu Cemetery. He is survived by his wife Sibel, daughter Nükhet and son Sedat. == Legacy ==