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Australian wildfire arsonists face murder charges: police

Major Australian bushfire disasters
  • Feb 7-8, 2009: 84 dead, 640 homes lost as Australia's worst bushfire disaster hits rural Victoria, mainly northwest of Melbourne
  • Jan 10 2005: Nine dead and 110 injured as fires sweep through the Eyre Peninsula, South Australia
  • Jan 18, 2003: Four dead, more than 100 injured and 500 homes destroyed in Canberra
  • Dec 24, 2001 - Jan 7, 2002: 109 homes destroyed, no fatalities in Blue Mountains, Hunter Valley and western Sydney suburbs in New South Wales
  • Dec 2, 1998 - Five firefighters killed at Linton, Victoria
  • January, 1994: Four dead, 200 homes destroyed when fires hit Sydney's northern, western and southern outskirts
  • Feb 16, 1983: 75 dead, 2,300 homes destroyed in "Ash Wednesday" bushfires in Victoria and South Australia
  • Feb 7, 1967: 62 dead, 1,300 homes destroyed in Hobart, Tasmania
  • Jan 8, 1969: 22 dead, 230 homes lost in Victoria
  • Jan 14-Feb 14, 1944: 32 dead, 700 homes lost in central and western Victoria
  • Dec 22, 1944: 10 dead in grassfires in Wangaratta, Victoria
  • Jan 13, 1939: 71 dead, 700 homes destroyed in "Black Friday" fires in Victoria
  • February-March, 1922: 60 dead in Gippsland, eastern Victoria, 31 in a single day, Feb 14Sources: Geoscience Australia, NSW Fire Brigades, ABC. Photo courtesy of AFP.
  • by Staff Writers
    Sydney (AFP) Feb 8, 2009
    Arsonists responsible for starting Australian wildfires which killed at least 84 people and destroyed more than 600 homes could be charged with murder, police warned Sunday.

    There was no doubt arsonists were behind some of the fires in Australia's southeast, police said, shocking a nation watching transfixed as towering flames and grieving families dominated television screens.

    "Some of these fires have started in localities that could only be by hand, it could not be natural causes," Victoria state Police Deputy Commissioner Kieran Walshe said.

    "We do need to get to the position where we can get our investigators and our forensic scientists into the fire scenes to do a full, thorough investigation," he said.

    A police spokeswoman said anyone found to have started the fires -- during a once-in-a-century heatwave which has turned the countryside into a tinderbox -- would likely be charged with murder or manslaughter.

    "They can be charged with murder, it depends on the evidence that comes to hand," the spokeswoman said.

    "They could be charged with manslaughter or they could be charged with murder."

    The government's Australian Institute of Criminology released a report last week which said half of the nation's 20,000 to 30,000 bushfires each year are deliberate.

    Twenty-six fires were burning in Victoria Sunday, with another 53 blazing throughout neighbouring New South Wales.

    Police in New South Wales said they had charged a 31-year-old man with deliberately lighting a fire Saturday at Peats Ridge, north of the capital Sydney, which burnt 175 hectares (430 acres).

    State premier Nathan Rees said arsonists faced a maximum 25 years' jail.

    "We will throw the book at you if you are caught," he said. "This is not fun, this is not clever, this is something that can kill people."

    South Australia Premier Mike Rann said at least 20 percent of fires in the state this summer had been set by arsonists, with another 20 percent the result of "stupidity or negligence."

    "These people are terrorists within our nation, they are the enemy within and we have to be increasingly vigilant about them," he told reporters.

    Victoria's Country Fire Authority said one or more arsonists had relit fires which had been brought under control Saturday in the Gippsland region, in the state's east.

    "We know we do have someone who is lighting fires in this community," CFA deputy chief of operations Steve Warrington told ABC radio.

    "While we often think it's spotting (embers spreading the flames), we also know that there are people lighting fires deliberately."

    Federal opposition leader Malcolm Turnbull said those responsible for starting fires must be caught.

    "It is difficult to imagine a more horrific crime than arson," he told reporters.

    "All Australians will expect the authorities to have the police to... be absolutely relentless in tracking down those responsible and ensuring they're brought to justice."

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