Magdalena Kopp

Magdalena Kopp
Born 1948 (1948)
Neu-Ulm, Bavaria, West Germany
Died 15 June 2015(2015-06-15) (aged 66–67)
Residence Neu-Ulm. Germany
Nationality German
Occupation Photographer
Known for Wife and accomplice of Ilich Ramírez Sánchez
Home town Neu-Ulm
Spouse(s) Ilich Ramírez Sánchez

Magdalena Cäcilia Kopp (2 April 1948 – 15 June 2015) was a photographer and member of the Frankfurt Revolutionary Cells (RZ). She was known for being the wife and accomplice of political militant Ilich Ramírez Sánchez also known as "Carlos the Jackal".

Early life

Magdalena Kopp grew up in Neu-Ulm[1] and after leaving school trained as a photographer. In 1967 she went to Frankfurt, where she frequented in the early 1970s in the leftist student circles and lived with friends in a shared flat. She worked for the publication Red Star and was one of the founders of the Frankfurt Revolutionary Cells (RZ). Members of this group, in addition to her new friend Johannes Weinrich were Hans-Joachim Klein, Wilfried Böse and Brigitte Kuhlmann. They were involved in the attack on the OPEC conference in 1975 and in the hijacking of an Air France plane to Entebbe in 1976.

With Weinrich she met with the internationally wanted political militant/terrorist Ilich Ramírez Sánchez, known as Carlos who was his friend. Later she moved to France and joined the command "Boudia" led by Carlos, who also became her lover.[1] Soon she worked as a part of his inner circle.

Arrest

On 16 February 1982 she was arrested in Paris by French police together with Bruno Bréguet, a Swiss citizen who had served a prison sentence in Israel for possession of explosives. When a policeman noticed their Peugeot car was improperly parked and asked to see their papers Breguet attempted to shoot him but had forgotten to release his pistol's safety catch and was overpowered. Kopp, who had bolted, was cornered a block away from the scene and surrendered. Five kilos of Penthrit (pentaerythritol tetranitrate) were found in the car as well as false passports and other incriminating documents including sketch plans of various locations. Under interrogation it was established that they were planning to blow up the offices of the exiled Arabic political magazine Al Watan Al Arabi because it had annoyed Syria's President Hafez el-Assad who had granted Kopp, Carlos and other terrorists asylum in Damascus.

Time in prison

On May 24, 1982, Kopp was sentenced to four years' imprisonment. Boudia Command carried out several terrorist attacks to pressure the government for the release of Kopp and Breguet. Kopp was released on May 4, 1985 with a reduction of seven months of her sentence for good behavior but was deported to Germany where she was detained and questioned again, this time by German police. Subsequently she was set free and in less than a month she moved to Damascus, Syria where she met and reunited with Ilyich Ramirez (Carlos). In 1985 they were married.

Later life

On August 17, 1986 she gave birth to their daughter Elba Rosa Ramirez Kopp. She and Carlos lived quietly until 1990 when Syria, as an ally of United States in the Gulf War, asked them to leave the country. They went to Libya, but it rejected their residency visa and they had to return to Syria, where they remained for a short time. Kopp and Carlos then decided to separate and she went to Venezuela with his mother while Carlos traveled to Sudan with a diplomatic passport. In Venezuela, she lived in Valencia for a few months until the Venezuelan press found out about her and then made ample references to her past, due to her association with Carlos. Kopp then took steps to return to Germany and on finding that the government had no charges against her, returned home where she lived with her daughter and stayed out of politics.

In 2007, she published her memoirs entitled Die Terrorjahre: Mein Leben an der Seite von Carlos (The Years of Terror: My Life with Carlos). She lived with her daughter in her hometown of Neu-Ulm, Germany until her death on 15 June 2015.[2]

Kopp is portrayed by Nora von Waldstätten in the 2010 French-German television mini-series Carlos.

References

  1. 1 2 Colin Smith - Carlos retrieved 20 December 2010
  2. FOCUS Online (22 June 2015). "Terrorismus: Carlos' Ex-Frau Magdalena Kopp gestorben". FOCUS Online.

1994 - article Magdalena Kopp (in Spanish) (Link no longer freely accessible on 22/02/2012, but left in the article as a reference. Other more recent articles at the same site about Magdalena Kopp may be found using a search facility at the site)

2007 - Interview with Magdalena Kopp (in Spanish)

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