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Friday, July 22, 2011

Norway reels after bomb blast, youth camp attack

Smoke pours from a building in the center of Oslo, Norway, on Friday, July 22, after an explosion that damaged several buildings, including the prime minister's office, shattering windows and covering the street with documents. The bombing was linked to a nearly simultaneous attack on a youth camp northwest of Olso in which a man dressed as a policeman opened fire on young people.

 A man tends to a wounded woman after an explosion near government buildings in Oslo.

 
An injured woman is helped by a man at the scene of the explosion. The blast damaged government buildings in central Oslo, including Prime Minister Jens Stoltenberg's office.


A young victim is helped in the center of Oslo, following an explosion that tore open several buildings.

 
An aerial view of Utoya Island taken July 21. A gunman opened fire on youths at a camp on the island, killing at least nine. Police arrested a suspect, a Norwegian, and said he was linked to the bomb blast in Oslo.





A swat team aim their weapons while people take cover during a shoot out at Utoeya island, some 40 km south west of the capital Oslo on Friday.

A wounded woman is brought ashore opposite Utaoya island after being rescued from a gunman who went on a killing rampage targeting participants in a Norwegian Labour Party youth organisation event on the island on Friday.

A damaged building is seen after the bomb blast.

Rescue officials help a wounded man.

The wreckage of a vehicle lies outside government buildings after the blast.

An injured man is treated at the scene in Oslo. 




Multiple deaths at scene of Oslo explosion; many casualties reported on island



Police arrested a 32-year-old Norwegian man on the island, linked him to both assaults and said they did not know the motive.
Norwegian media identified him as Anders Behring Breivik and said authorities searched his home.
At least seven people were killed when the bomb exploded in the Norwegian capital in mid-afternoon, blowing out the windows of the prime minister's building and damaging the finance and oil ministry building. Prime Minister Jens Stoltenberg was not in the building at the time. The blast scattered glass, shattered masonry and twisted steel across the streets.
Hours later, a gunman opened fire at the youth camp on Utoya island, about 25 miles northwest of Oslo. Police said at least nine were shot dead. The small wooded island was evacuated, and police found undetonated explosives. Authorities feared the death toll would rise.
The twin assaults were the biggest attack in western Europe since the 2005 London transport bombings that killed 52.


"You will not destroy us," Stoltenberg, who had been scheduled to appear at an event on the island, said at an emotional press conference. "You will not destroy our democracy or our ideals for a better world."
Police confirm nine dead on island
Image: Utoya Island, Norway
An aerial view of Utoya Island, Norway, taken Thursday

Island terror The camp on the small, wooded island in Tyrifjord lake was full of youngsters 14 to 18 years old, attending an event run by the Labor Party.
Witnesses said they saw as many as 20 bodies on the island or in the water. But police said they could confirm only nine deaths. A police spokesman said a 10th person might may have been killed, but that was "uncertain."
NRK reporter Astrid Randen quoted witnesses as saying the man — described as "tall, blond and Nordic-looking" and speaking Norwegian — wore a police uniform and summoned youth at the political gathering to gather around him before he "just executed them."
Jorgen Benone recounted a terrifying ordeal to Sky News. He said he was about to sit down with others to eat when they heard a loud commotion by the water.
"People were wondering, what's happening?... Then people began understanding that people had been shot," he said. "People started jumping out of windows, running everywhere, all directions — they were terrified for their life.

"Most people ran toward the water, hiding behind stones... The guy was dressed like a policeman. It was total chaos, people were jumping into the water trying to swim to the other side."
He told the British media outlet he saw the shooter about 60 feet away and didn't dare make a move. "I thought, I'm terrified for my life," he said. "I thought about all the people I love and I just wanted to go home."
 Slideshow: Bomb blast in central Oslo (on this page)
Another survivor, Emilie Bersaas, told Sky News she heard gunshots, fled to nearby building and hid under a bed.
"The shooting came from all different directions," she said. "It was very terrifying. At one point the shooting was very, very close to the building — I think it actually hit the building one time."
The Norwegian news agency NTB quoted witnesses describing a scene of "complete panic."
A witness said in a text message that "we are very afraid," the agency reported. "We do not know what to do. Many people are injured. We are afraid. We are waiting for help. Some are seriously injured. We cannot do anything."
The island is in Tyrifjord lake, about one-third of a mile from the mainland at its closest point, with no bridge. Anita Lien, who lives on the lake near the island, described a terrifying scene.

"I just saw people jumping into the water, about 50 people swimming toward the shore. People were crying, shaking, they were terrified," Lien said,

Under arrest
The suspect was arrested on the island, but the circumstances were not clear. Police said a man of similar description had been seen earlier in Oslo before the explosion there.

A camp guard, Simen Braenden Mortensen, said that the gunman had tricked his way onto the island by posing as a policeman driving a silver grey car.

"He gets out of the car and shows ID, says he's sent there to check security, that that is purely routine in connection with the terror attack (in Oslo)," Mortensen told the daily Verdens Gang.

"It all looks fine, and a boat is called and it carries him over to Utoya. A few minutes passed, then we heard shots," he said.


Bjorn Jarle Rodberg Larsen, a member of the Hedmark County Council of Labor, told Nettavisen that colleagues on the scene said the man walked in Friday afternoon shortly after the bombing.

"He was in a police uniform and said he was part of the increased security," Larsen said, quoting the eyewitnesses. "A little after he arrived, he took out a gun and began shooting."

Several prominent politicians made appearances at the island event this week. Former Prime Minister Gro Harlem Brundtland gave a speech earlier Friday, and Stoltenberg had been scheduled to speak Saturday.

At a news conference Friday night, police said the gunman was not connected to the police and "has no relation to us."

People in at least 20 pleasure boats converged on the island to help with the rescue operation. One of them, André Skeie, told NRK that he saw at least a dozen "lifeless bodies" floating in the water.

Skeie said he helped remove more than 15 injured people from the island. Many of them were shot in the stomach, he said.

"It's absolutely awful. It looks like a war zone," Skeie said by phone.

Ulleval hospital said it was treating 10 people, some of them seriously injured, from the conference.

Bombing in Oslo
In Oslo, police confirmed at least seven dead in the bomb blast. At least 10 injured people were admitted to Oslo University Hospital, a hospital spokesman told Reuters.

Why would terrorists want to attack Norway?

The blast blew out most windows on the 17-story building housing Stoltenberg's office, as well as nearby ministries including the oil ministry, which caught fire.

"People ran in panic," bystander Kjersti Vedun said. "I counted at least 10 injured people."

Heavy debris littered the streets and a tall plume of brown smoke rose over the city center. The tangled wreckage of a vehicle could be seen near the blast site.

The Reuters correspondent said the streets had been fairly quiet in mid-afternoon on a Friday in high summer, when many Oslo residents take vacation or leave for weekend breaks. Video: Norway reels after blast, camp attack (on this page)

A Twitter user, Christian Aglen, @chaglen, posted what he said was a short video of the aftermath of the blast.

Sulfur in the air
Olaf Furniss, a freelance journalist in Oslo, told the BBC that he was in a cafe when the blast went off, but he had not realized how big it was until he went outside. Residents reported the smell of sulfur in the air.

One witness in Oslo, who spoke to the BBC and was identified only as Ella, said, "We are the good guys; stuff like this doesn't happen to us."Story: Norway attack: Likely suspected groups

However, political violence is virtually unknown in the country.

"There certainly aren't any domestic Norwegian terrorist groups although there have been some al-Qaida-linked arrests from time to time," David Lea, Western Europe analyst at Control Risks, said. "They are in Afghanistan and were involved in Libya, but it's far too soon to draw any conclusions."

Lise Sand described the blast in a series of messages on her Twitter account.

"Our windows shook, and we could actually feel the shake," she added. "The whole area is evacuated. Sirens everywhere."

Craig Barnes, a British man who was in the center of Oslo when the blast happened, told the Sky News that he had "put my foot down" on the accelerator of the car and got to a friend's house.

"It's absolute chaos, there are many people injured," he told Sky.

"There's debris over at least half a kilometer (546 yards) ... total chaos," Barnes added. "It's absolutely mad."

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