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Turkey re-considering death penalty after Erdogan’s wildfires comment: Minister

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Turkey will reconsider a 2004 decision to abolish capital punishment, the justice minister said on Saturday, after President Recep Tayyip Erdogan raised the death penalty in connection with the cause of this week’s wildfires.

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Capital punishment was struck from the constitution in the early years of Erdogan’s rule. But after a suspected deliberate blaze destroyed 4,500 hectares (11,119 acres) of Aegean coastal forest, Erdogan said tougher justice was needed.

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Authorities have said that a suspect detained in connection with the fire has admitted to causing it. The blaze, in woodland near the resort of Marmaris, has been contained, authorities said on Saturday.

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After visiting the scene on Friday, Erdogan said the punishment for burning forests should be “intimidating, and if that’s a death sentence, it’s a death sentence.”

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Speaking to reporters in the eastern town of Agri on Saturday, Justice Minister Bekir Bozdag said the president’s comments “are instructions to us.”

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“We have started working on it as the ministry,” Bozdag said, adding that the current punishment for starting wildfires was 10 years in prison, rising to a possible life sentence if part of organized crime.

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The country’s first big blaze of the summer began on Tuesday and conjured memories of last year’s fires which ravaged 140,000 hectares of countryside, the worst on record.

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Interior Minister Suleyman Soylu said on Thursday that the detained suspect had admitted to burning down the forest out of frustration due to family issues.

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Local officials told Reuters in recent days that authorities lacked the necessary equipment and personnel for another summer of fires.

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On Friday, Forestry Minister Vahit Kirisci said 88 percent of forest fires in Turkey were started by people.

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Read more:

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Turkey’s spy agency captures alleged Greek spy: Local media

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Turkey wildfire contained after 4,500 hectares scorched

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