Growing up in Nevşehir, a small province in Central Anatolia. Çatlı was familiar with the views of the far right MHP, and Turkish ultra-nationalists, which were strong in this area.
1978–1984
Çatlı was responsible, along with Haluk Kırcı and several other MHP members, for the 9 October 1978 Bahçelievler Massacre in which seven university students, members of the Workers Party of Turkey, were murdered. He is also said to have helped Mehmet Ali Ağca murder the left-wing newspaper editor Abdi İpekçi on 1 January 1979, in Istanbul, and helped Ağca escape from an Istanbul military prison later that year. According to investigative journalistLucy Komisar, Çatlı "reportedly helped organize Ağca's escape from an Istanbul military prison, and some have suggested Çatlı was even involved in the 1981 Pope's assassination attempt". In February 1982, he was caught with heroin in Switzerland, but he managed to escape detention. In 1998 the magazine Monde diplomatique alleged that Abdullah Çatlı had organized the assassination attempt "in exchange for the sum of 3 million German mark" for the Grey Wolves. In 1985 in Rome, Çatlı declared to a judge "that he had been contacted by the BND, the German intelligence agency, promised him a nice sum of money if he implicated the Russian and Bulgarian services in the assassination attempt against the Pope". Çatlı then went to France, where, under the alias of Hasan Kurtoğlu, he planned a series of attacks on Armenian interests and on the ASALA, with help from MİT. These included the Alfortville Armenian Genocide Memorial Bombing on 3 May 1984 and the attempted murder of activist Ara Toranian. According to Alparslan Türkeş, the founder of the Grey Wolves and the Nationalist Movement Party, "Çatlı has co-operated in the frame of a secret service working for the well-being of the state".
1984–1996
Turkish intelligence service paid Çatlı in heroin, and he was eventually arrested in Paris on 24 October 1984 for drug trafficking. He was sentenced to seven years imprisonment and in 1988 he was handed over to Switzerland, where he was also wanted on charges of drug dealing. However, he escaped in March 1990 with the assistance of the Grey Wolves. He returned to Turkey, and was then recruited by the police for "special missions" while he was officially being sought by the Turkish authorities for murder. Turkish Prime MinisterTansu Çiller declared on 4 October 1993: "We know the list of businessmen and artists subjected to racketeering by the PKK and we shall be bringing their members to account." Beginning on 14 January 1994, almost a hundred people were kidnapped by commandos wearing uniforms and travelling in police vehicles and then killed somewhere along the road from Ankara to Istanbul. Çatlı demanded money from people who were on "Çiller’s list", promising to get their names removed. One of his victims, Behçet Cantürk, was to pay ten million dollars, to which casino king Ömer Lütfü Topal added a further seventeen million. However, after receiving the money, he then went on to have them kidnapped and killed, and sometimes tortured beforehand. According to Mehmet Eymür, a team led by Çatlı was responsible for the 1995 deaths of Iranian spies Lazım Esmaeili and Askar Simitko. Çatlı's fingerprint was also allegedly found on the drum of one of the machine guns used to assassinate Ömer Lütfü Topal. In 1996, Çatlı kidnapped the TV businessman Mehmet Ali Yaprak and demanded a ransom of four million deutschmarks.
Death
Çatlı died in a car crash on 3 November 1996 in Susurluk, a town in the province of Balıkesir. Also killed in the crash were Hüseyin Kocadağ, Sedat Bucak, and Gonca Us. Sedat Bucak, a Kurdish village guards leader, was the sole person to survive the crash. His militia, funded by the Turkish state, was active against the Kurdistan Workers' Party. The Susurluk scandal exposed the deep state in Turkey. At the time of his death, Çatlı was a convicted fugitive, wanted for drug trafficking and murder. Muhsin Yazıcıoğlu from the far right Great Union Party attended his funeral and Mehmet Ali Ağca sent flowers from prison in Rome.
Abdullah Çatlı in fiction
Bruce Sterling's 2000 novel Zeitgeist includes a major character loosely based on Çatlı.
Personal life
Çatlı's father was Ahmet Çatlıoğlu; the "-oğlu" suffix is a patronymic. Çatlı had a brother, Zeki. Abdullah Çatlı married his neighbor Meral Aydoğan on 10 August 1974. On 22 May 1975, they had a daughter named Gökçen, who is currently a doctoral student in politics and international relations. Later he had another daughter, Selcen.