Turkish gunman lays flowers at John Paul II’s Vatican tomb

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This handout photo grabed from a video made and released by ADNKRONOS on December 27, 2014 shows Mehmet Ali Agca, the Turkish former extremist who attempted to assassinate Pope John Paul II in 1981, holding a wreath of flowers on St. Peter's square in The Vatican. Ali Agca on December 27 laid flowers on the Pope John Paul II's tomb.
This handout photo grabed from a video made and released by ADNKRONOS on December 27, 2014 shows Mehmet Ali Agca, the Turkish former extremist who attempted to assassinate Pope John Paul II in 1981, holding a wreath of flowers on St. Peter’s square in The Vatican. Ali Agca on December 27 laid flowers on the Pope John Paul II’s tomb.

The Turkish gunman who shot and wounded John Paul II in 1981 laid white flowers Saturday on the saint’s tomb in St. Peter’s Basilica, Vatican officials said.

The surprise visit by Mehmet Ali Agca, believed to be his first time in the Vatican since the assassination attempt, lasted a few minutes, a Vatican spokesman, the Rev. Ciro Benedettini, said. As with other flowers left by visitors to the tomb, the blossoms were later removed by basilica workers.

Benedettini said there are no legal matters pending against Agca in the Vatican and he was free to visit. Agca’s trip came on the 31st anniversary of his meeting with the pope.

John Paul, who forgave his attacker, visited Agca in a Rome prison on Dec. 27, 1983, and later intervened to gain Agca’s release in 2000. Agca was extradited to Turkey for the 1979 killing of a Turkish journalist and he completed a 10-year sentence there in 2010.

When Agca was apprehended after shooting the pontiff in St. Peter’s Square during a public audience, the Turk said he acted alone. Later he suggested Bulgaria and the Soviet secret services masterminded the attack on the Polish-born pontiff, whose championing of the Polish Solidarity labor movement alarmed Moscow.

Twice, Italian juries acquitted three Bulgarians and three Turks of alleged roles in the shooting. Agca has often given contradictory accounts and has claimed to be a Messiah.

(FILES) This file photo taken 27 December 1983 in Rome shows Pope John Paul II shaking hands with Ali Agca. Mehmet Ali Agca, a Turk, shot and wounded John Paul II, hitting him in the abdomen, on 13 May 1981 in St. Peter's Square in Rome. He is due to be freed from jail in Istanbul, 12 january 2006.  AFP PHOTO / OSSERVATORE ROMANO  (Photo credit should read OSSERVATORE ROMANO ARTURO MARI/AFP/Getty Images)
(FILES) This file photo taken 27 December 1983 in Rome shows Pope John Paul II shaking hands with Ali Agca. Mehmet Ali Agca, a Turk, shot and wounded John Paul II, hitting him in the abdomen, on 13 May 1981 in St. Peter’s Square in Rome. He is due to be freed from jail in Istanbul, 12 january 2006. AFP PHOTO / OSSERVATORE ROMANO ROMANO ARTURO MARI/AFP/Getty Images)

Italian TV ran a brief video of the tomb visit, apparently filmed by an Italian journalist accompanying Agca in the basilica. The Turk is heard to mumble, “A thousand thanks, saint,” and “Long live Jesus Christ.”

He also said: “Today I have come because on Dec. 27, 1983, I met the pope.”

Al Arabiya

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