Cumhuriyet
October 21, 1999, in Ankara, Turkey
Kislali, a regular columnist for the daily Cumhuriyet, was killed in a bomb attack in front of his suburban home in the capital, Ankara. He was pronounced dead on arrival at a local hospital after reportedly sustaining shrapnel wounds to his face and chest. His left arm was also torn off. Press reports, citing Turkish officials, said that the bomb was wrapped in newspaper and placed on the windshield of Kislali's car. When Kislali attempted to remove the package, it exploded.
While the identity of the perpetrators is unclear, Turkish security officials have been quoted as saying that the Great Eastern Islamic Raiders' Front, an extremist, underground Islamist group, claimed responsibility for the killing of Kislali, who was a staunch secularist and critic of the Islamist movement in Turkey. These reports, however, have not been verified.
In addition to his work at Cumhuriyet, Kislali taught political science at Ankara University. He served as culture minister in the late 1970s and had also been a member of Parliament.
Medium: Print
Job: Columnist / Commentator
Beats Covered: Politics
Gender: Male
Local or Foreign: Local
Freelance: No
Type of Death: Murder
Suspected Source of Fire: Political Group
Impunity: Partial
Taken Captive: No
Tortured: No
Threatened: No
Related Articles:
- Attacks on the Press 2000: Turkey, March 19, 2001
- Attacks on the Press 1999: 1999 Death Toll: Listed by Country, March 22, 2000
- Attacks on the Press 1999: Turkey, March 22, 2000
- Turkish Journalist Assassinated, October 21, 1999




