Saturday, July 23, 2011

Norway massacre suspect defends acts

Suspected right fanatic accused of killing at least 92 people consider their actions "brutal" still "need" that mourning for the victims of the worst attacks in Norway, the nation since the Second World War.

Police were hunting on Sunday to see if maybe the second shooter was involved in the killings and bombings shooting that wounded Friday normally peaceful Nordic countries.

In his first statements by a lawyer, who was arrested 32 years, the Norwegian Anders Breivik Behring has expressed his willingness to explain to the court at a hearing on Monday to extend the detention.

"He said he believes that the action was terrible, but in his mind they need," the lawyer said Geir Lippestad independent TV2 News.

Police said Breivik only after acknowledging the massacre in which at least 85 dead, mostly young people who participate in summer camp of the youth wing of the Labour Party to power in Norway on the island of idyllic.

Breivik, was also arrested for assaulting a government district of Oslo, which have killed seven people before. Not the most difficult in Norway is 21 years in prison.

Survivors, relatives of victims and supporters of a planned procession to mourn the death Sundvollen Sunday near the island where the massacre took place.

Participate in the service of King Harald in the Oslo Cathedral, a few hundred meters (yards) from where a bomb destroyed government buildings, including offices, work by Prime Minister Jens Stoltenberg.

The police said the search for a missing a few losses could rise to 98 in the worst cases.

Lippestad, speaking at the Saturday night, did not elaborate on possible motives Breivik.

Breivik hated the "cultural Marxists" such as "crusade" against the spread of Islam and that he liked guns and weightlifting, Web communications, knowledge and responsibility.

Video posted on YouTube showed pictures of Breivik, including one of his diving suit Navy SEALs shows the type of automatic weapons.

"Before we begin our crusade we must do our duty to destroy the culture of Marxism," said the caption under the video entitled "Knights Templar in 2083" on YouTube, which removed the video Saturday.

Norway Site provides a link to a website that shows 1500 was the author says Breivik. It was not possible to verify who sent the video and wrote a book.

"If you decide to strike, it is better to kill too many than not enough, or you might want to reduce the influence of the strike ideological," said book.

Norway has always been open to immigration, which has been criticized by the Progress Party, which was briefly a member Breivik. Labour Party, Youth Camp Breivik attacked, has long been a supporter of immigration.

About 100 people were solemnly Sunday morning in an impromptu vigil near the church of the city of Oslo, laid flowers and lighted candles. Soldiers with rifles and bulletproof vests blocked streets leading to the seat of government.

"We all have pain, all fear," says Imran Shah, Pakistan Heritage taxi driver in Norway, as light rain fell during the summer in the unusually empty streets of Oslo.

"At first people thought Muslims were behind it," he said, some initial suspicions that the attacks were al-Qaeda could be in protest against the role of NATO member Norway, Afghanistan, in Iraq.

Some survivors said the horrors of shooting bullets, at least two sides.

"We're not sure" if he acted alone, police said Sveinung Sponheim. "This is one of the things the study will focus."

The police took almost 1.5 hours to stop the massacre, the worst sniper in the modern era. "The response time between when we received was fast. There are problems with the transport of the island," he said, defending the delay.

Witnesses say the shooter, dressed in police uniform, was able to unanswered for long. He chose his victims from the island northwest of Oslo Utoeya requires young people to scatter in panic or jump in a lake to swim to shore.

"I heard screams. I have heard people ask for his life, and I heard shots. Just breathe," the young members of the Labour Party Eric Gjerde course, 18 years, said Reuters.

"I was sure I was going to die," he said. "People were running everywhere. They panicked and jumped into the trees. People were trampled. "

The bloodshed was viewed as a deadly attack sniper around the modern era.

The suspect, tall, blond, owns a company called Organic Geofarm Breivik, a food company he used to buy fertilizer - perhaps to build a bomb in Oslo.

Home Grown anti-government militants struck elsewhere in the past, like the United States, where Timothy McVeigh killed 168 people, with a truck bomb in Oklahoma City in 1995.

The affected area is the heart of power in Norway. But security is not scarce in a country accustomed to this kind of violence and is best known for the Nobel Prize for peace and conflict resolution, including the Middle East and Sri Lanka.

No comments:

Post a Comment