Turkey's President refuses to rule out the death penalty for thousands of people arrested after afailed military coup Friday, despite warnings that reintroducing capital punishment could dash Turkey's chances of joining the European Union, CNN reports.
Speaking through his translator in an exclusive interview with CNN's Becky Anderson, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan called the failed military coup a "clear crime of treason." The Turkish people have made it clear they want death for the "terrorists" who plotted the coup, Erdogan said in his first interview since the July 15 attempt.
"The people now have the idea, after so many terrorist incidents, that these terrorists should be killed, that's where they are, they don't see any other outcome to it," he said.
"Why should I keep them and feed them in prisons, for years to come? That's what the people say," he said. "They want a swift end to it, because people lost relatives, lost neighbors, lost children ... they're suffering, so the people are very sensitive and we have to act very sensibly and sensitively."
The comments come in the wake of the President's vow over the weekend that those responsible "will pay a heavy price for this act of treason."
A total of 8,777 officers from the Turkish Ministry of Interior have so far been removed from office, according to the state-run Anadolu news agency. Among the arrested are 103 generals and admirals, a third of the general-rank command of the Turkish military.
It would take a parliamentary decision in the form of a constitutional measure to make the death penalty an option, Erdogan said. "Leaders will have to get together and discuss it and if they accept to discuss it then I as President will approve any decision that comes out of the parliament," he said.
For your notice, Turkey abolished the death penalty for peacetime crimes in 2002, followed by a total ban in 2004 as part of a series of human rights reforms undertaken for its membership bid for the European Union. If Turkey does reintroduce the death penalty, it won't be joining the European Union, EU foreign policy chief Federica Mogherini said earlier Monday.