13 inmates killed in Turkish prison fire

Loading


Several ambulances and police units are entering into the ?anl?urfa E-type Prison to recue the victims of prison fire. (Photo: AA)

Inmates in a prison in southeast Turkey set beds and blankets alight, starting a fire that killed 13 prisoners, authorities said Sunday.

Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdo?an said the fire affected a ward housing 18 inmates in the prison in the mostly-Kurdish city of ?anl?urfa. He said some inmates set their bedding on fire following a fight that broke out inside the ward late on Saturday.
It was not immediately clear if the victims had died of burns or from asphyxiation. Authorities said five of the inmates were hospitalized for smoke inhalation but none was in serious condition. The Sanliurfa prison holds some 1,000 prisoners.

Inmates in Turkey have in the past set bedding alight in riots to protest poor prison conditions, but authorities insisted the incident was not a mutiny. A pro-Kurdish legislator, jailed for alleged links to an outlawed Kurdish terrorist group, was staying in a separate ward and was not affected by the fire, the region’s governor, Celalettin Güvenç told reporters.

He said authorities had launched an investigation into the incident, including into possible delays by authorities or firefighters in responding to the fire. “Why (the firefighters) weren’t there on time, what caused the fighting, why were these people killed? All of these will be investigated,” Güvenç said.

Erdo?an said he would also order an investigation into the possibility that the ward may have been overcrowded. “I have been told by the governor that the ward’s capacity may not have been suitable to house 18 people,” he told reporters before his departure to Mexico to attend a Group of 20 summit meeting.

Meanwhile, police used pepper gas to disperse families and protesters who attempted to make their way through a road block to reach the prison, the state-run Anadolu Agency reported.


Related Articles

Why is the Islamic Republic of Iran afraid of Nasrin Sotoudeh

Loading

Nasrin Sotoudeh, a leading Iranian human rights lawyer, was sentenced to 38 years in prison and 148 lashes because of her work defending women’s rights and protesting against the country’s forced hijab laws

Executive Privilege

Loading

The removal of General Stanley McChrystal from command provided President Barack Obama with the perfect opportunity to review the entire

Iraq. Una guerra olvidada

Loading

Terminó –por así decirlo– hace menos de dos años y pareciera que la de Irak entró en perfecto olvido. Tal

No comments

Write a comment
No Comments Yet! You can be first to comment this post!

Write a Comment