The Daily Telegraph

Woman started fire that killed 46 ‘over lover’s suspected affair’

- By Our Foreign Staff

A TAIWANESE woman faces the death penalty for allegedly starting the island’s deadliest fire in decades in an attempt to get back at a boyfriend she suspected was cheating on her.

October’s inferno in the southern city of Kaohsiung raged through several floors of a dilapidate­d 13-storey apartment block for hours, killing 46 people.

Authoritie­s had said the blaze started when a resident, identified by her family name Huang, left incense ashes on a sofa before leaving the building.

Prosecutor­s yesterday indicted Huang, 51, on murder and arson charges, and said she should get the death penalty for deliberate­ly starting the fire to get back at the boyfriend.

“Huang intended to light a fire to cause an incident and embarrass her boyfriend, leading to a major disaster and the loss of many innocent lives,” Kaohsiung district prosecutor­s’ office said. “She has shown no remorse and her attitude is bad ... (prosecutor­s) recommend that the court impose capital punishment to serve as a warning.”

Huang has admitted lighting sandalwood incense to repel mosquitoes but has given inconsiste­nt statements according to prosecutor­s.

She initially claimed she threw the incense into a bin, but later said she could not remember what she did.

The blaze highlighte­d concerns over lax safety standards in Taiwan and exposed the poor living conditions of the elderly in a rapidly ageing society.

Taiwan is one of Asia’s most progressiv­e democracie­s and markets itself as a regional bastion of human rights.

But it has drawn criticism from the internatio­nal community and local rights groups for continuing to enforce the death penalty.

Some 35 prisoners have been put to death since 2010.

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