Türkiye will reconsider a 2004 decision to abolish capital punishment, the justice minister said on Saturday, after President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan raised the death penalty in connection with the cause of this week's wildfires.
Capital punishment was struck from the constitution in the early years of Erdoğan's rule. But after a suspected deliberate blaze destroyed 4,500 hectares (11,119 acres) of Aegean coastal forest, Erdoğan said tougher justice was needed.
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.
After visiting the scene on Friday, Erdoğan said the punishment for burning forests should be "intimidating, and if that's a death sentence, it's a death sentence".
Speaking to reporters in the eastern town of Ağrı on Saturday, Justice Minister Bekir Bozdağ said the president's comments "are instructions to us."
"We have started working on it as the ministry," Bozdağ said, adding that the current punishment for starting wildfires was 10 years in prison, rising to a possible life sentence if part of organised crime.
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.
Interior Minister Süleyman Soylu said on Thursday that the detained suspect had admitted to burning down the forest out of frustration due to family issues.
Local officials told Reuters in recent days that authorities lacked the necessary equipment and personnel for another summer of fires.
On Friday, Forestry Minister Vahit Kirişçi said 88% of forest fires in Türkiye were started by people.