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This Happened

This Happened — May 13: Papal Assassination Attempt

Mehmet Ali Ağca attempted to kill Pope John Paul II on this day in 1981 in St. Peter's Square.

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Who was Mehmet Ali Ağca?

Mehmet Ali Ağca was a Turkish national who was a member of the extremist right-wing organization known as the Grey Wolves.

Why did Mehmet Ali Ağca try to kill Pope John Paul II?

Mehmet Ali Ağca's motive for attempting to assassinate the Pope remains unclear. However, he later claimed that he was acting on orders from God and once hinted that he was following orders of communist agents of the Soviet KGB and Bulgarian secret service.

Was Pope John Paul II injured in the assassination attempt?

Pope John Paul II was shot four times by Mehmet Ali Ağca but survived the attack. He underwent surgery and spent several weeks in the hospital before making a full recovery.

What happened to Mehmet Ali Ağca after the assassination attempt?

Mehmet Ali Ağca was arrested and sentenced to life imprisonment in Italy for the attempted assassination of the Pope. He served 19 years in prison before being pardoned by the Italian government in 2000 at the request of the Vatican. Ağca was later extradited to Turkey, where he served additional time in prison for the murder of a journalist. He was released from prison in 2010. Famously, John Paul met with and forgave Ağca two years after the shooting.

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Green

Libya To Lampedusa, The Toll Of Climate Migration That Spans The Mediterranean

The death toll for Libya's catastrophic flood this week continues to rise, at the same time that the Italian island of Lampedusa raises alarms over unprecedented number of migrant arrivals. What look at first like two distinct stories are part of the same mounting crisis that the world is simply not prepared to face: climate migration.

Photograph of migrants covering themselves from the sun as they wait to be transferred away from the Lampedusa island. An officer stands above them and the ocean speeds in the background.

September 15, 2023, Lampedusa: Migrants wait in Cala Pisana to be transferred to other places from the island

Ciro Fusco/ZUMA
Valeria Berghinz

-Analysis-

It’s a difficult number for the brain to comprehend: 20,000. That is the current estimate of how many people were killed — the majority, likely, instantly drowned and washed away — after a dam broke during a massive storm in eastern Libya on Sunday.

As the search continues for victims (the official death count currently stands at over 11,000) in and around the city of Derna, across the Mediterranean Sea, a different number tells another troubling story: in the span of just two days, 7,000 migrants have arrived on the island of Lampedusa.

Midway between Sicily and the North African coast, the tiny Italian island has long been a destination for those hailing from all points south and east to arrive on European soil. Still, the staggering number of arrivals this week of people ready to risk their lives on the perilous journey across the Mediterranean should again set off alarms that reach far beyond the island.

Yet these two numbers — one of the thousands of dead, the other of thousands of survivors — are in some way really one story.

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