Kutlu Adalı

Kutlu Adalı (1935 in Nicosia July 6, 1996), was a Turkish Cypriot journalist, poet and socio-political researcher, and peace advocate.

Kutlu Adalı
Born1935
DiedJuly 6, 1996(1996-07-06) (aged 60–61)
NationalityCypriot
OccupationAuthor, Journalist

Background

His family emigrated to Antalya, Turkey when he was three years old. After completing his secondary education, he returned in 1954 taking up employment at Cyprus Turkish Communal Chamber.

Before his retirement, he was the head of the Department of Population and Birth Registration in the recently declared Turkish Republic of North Cyprus.

In the years leading to his assassination, Kutlu Adali was a well-respected journalist working for the left-wing Yeni Düzen newspaper in Nicosia, writing daily in his regular column From Blue Cyprus. While his early works, including his books and periodicals, were nationalistic in content, his latter contributions were critical of the then right-wing establishment prevalent in the north of his home island.

Death

On July 6, 1996, he was fatally machine-gunned, outside his home. To this day, the perpetrators of this crime are yet to be brought to justice. Some sources state the Grey Wolves are responsible for his death,[1][2] however another source states the Turkish Revenge Brigade is responsible.[3]

Bibliography

  • Köy Raporları (Village Reports), 1961, 1962, 1963 (Turkish)
  • Dağarcık (Shepherd's Bag), 1963, (travelogue) (Turkish)
  • Söyleşi (Interview), 1968, (Turkish)
  • Çirkin Politikacı (The Ugly Politician), Pof, 1969 (satire) (Turkish)
  • Hayvanistan (Animalistan), 1969 (satire) (Turkish)
  • Sancılı Toplum (Society with Birth Pains), 1969 (Turkish)
  • Köprü (The Bridge), 1969, (play) (Turkish)
  • Şago, 1970, (play) (Turkish)
  • Nasrettin Hoca ve Kıbrıs (Naseruddin Hodja and Cyprus), 1971 (Turkish)

See also

References

  1. Grey Wolves, Encyclopedia of Terrorism, Ed. Cindy C. Combs and Martin W. Slann, (Infobase Publishing, 2007), 110.
  2. Barry M. Rubin, Judith Colp Rubin, Chronologies of modern terrorism, (M.E.Sharpe Inc., 2008), 93.
  3. Nancy J. Woodhull and Robert W. Snyder, Journalists in Peril, (Transaction Publishers, 1998), 3.
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