Terrorism in Oslo

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First news yesterday speculated it might be Islamic terrorism. Today they found out the guy was part of the Norwegian Nazi scene, in fact, anti-Islamic. It's a terrible thing to think that the young people had no real chance to escape, because it all happened on an island. Shocking to wake up to the news of so many people having lost their lives. A sad day indeed :(
 
It's been hard to not focus on the news since this happened. I keep switching on the news channels to check if there's some new information. My family and friends are all accounted for thankfully. My sister's friend had been on the island and managed to escape. A friend of mine had been in the centre of Oslo, he posted from his phone wondering what the Hell was going on, writing that there was smell of smoke and blood. He didn't fully understand it until he turned on the news after returning home.

That bastard who did this called himself a nationalist and had a hatred towards the Labour Party's youth wing, calling them the Stoltenberg-jugend, Stoltenberg is the party leader and our Prime Minister.:mad:
 
^ So sorry to hear about your friend and your sister's friend, but also good to hear that they are safe :hug:

A sad day for the country of Norway, it's such a beautiful and peaceful place.
 
Thank you Canedge and Last unicorn. :hug: It just feels unreal and I guess security in Norway will increase like in other countries after this. I'm reading on a lot of Norwegian blogs and debate-forums and sadly there are a lot of extreme political uttering, this guy used to write on a site called Document.no which is a Islam critical forum. He wrote a long comment against hate-ideologies which he included Islam, Nazism and Marxism, claiming someone calling themselves moderate could easily turn to extremist thinking. What irony when he himself is an extremist, he of course not being aware of that himself that psycho. :angry:
 
Foreign Policy, July 23
I have just finished reading through what appears to be the 1,518-page manifesto and handbook of the alleged perpetrator of the worst terrorist attack in Norwegian history.

The manifesto, bylined by someone calling himself Andrew Berwick, is entitled "2083: A European Declaration of Independence" and was posted on Stormfront.org, a white supremacist website, and discovered by American blogger Kevin I. Slaughter. [UPDATE: Norwegian TV has confirmed that the author is indeed the Oslo shooter, according to the New York Times.]

In it, "Berwick" declares himself a "Justiciar Knight Commander," a leading member of a "re-founded" Knights Templar group formed at an April 2002 meeting in London. He claims the founding group has 9 members, whom he does not name, and that three other sympathizers were not able to attend the original meeting.

"Our purpose," the document reads, is to "seize political and military control of Western European countries and implement a cultural conservative political agenda." In grim, apocalyptic language, it advocates attacks on "traitors" across Europe who are supposedly enabling a Muslim takeover of the continent. "[W]e should…not exceed (per 2010) aprox. 45,000 dead and 1 million wounded cultural Marxists/multiculturalists in Western Europe," the author writes. "The time for dialogue is over. We gave peace a chance. The time for armed resistance has come." The manifesto also provides detailed instructions for everything from making a bomb to raising funds to preparing physically and mentally for what the author describes as a coming three-stage "civil war" between patriotic nationalists and "multiculturalists" who are, wittingly or not, destroying European civilization.

Filled with hateful rantings against Muslims--whom the author claims are on a trajectory to take over Europe and erase its culture patrimony--the writing bears a great resemblence to online comments attributed to Anders Breivik, 32, the confessed perpetrator of a massacre that has so far claimed nearly 100 lives. The author also claims to be Norwegian, and says that English is not his native language. And at the bottom of the document are several pictures of Breivick in different outfits, including the frogman costume pictured above. Most suggestive of all, perhaps, is the detailed diary the author kept of his 82-day attempt to secretly build a fertilizer bomb while hiding out at a farm purchased explicitly for that purpose--chronicling his attempts to construct a device that would kill as many people as possible.
Oddly, despite his evident hatred of Muslims and Arabs, "Berwick" professes admiration for al Qaeda, which he lists as one of only two "successful militant organisations" due to its "superior structural adaptation." "If Muhammad was alive today," he writes, "Usama Bin Laden would have been his second in command." Elsewhere, he cites al Qaeda's training manual as a reference, and declares, "Just like Jihadi warriors are the plum tree of the Ummah, we will be the plum tree for Europe and for Christianity."

In another eerie parallel, he also calls for suicidal operations in service of the larger cause: "Let us be perfectly clear; if you are unwilling to martyr yourself for the cause, then the PCCTS, Knights Templar is not for you." (PCCTS, he explains, stands for "Pauperes commilitones Christi Templique Solomonici" or, in English, "Poor Fellow-Soldiers of Christ and of the Temple of Solomon.")


Chillingly, the manifesto ends:

I believe this will be my last entry. It is now Fri July 22nd, 12.51.

Sincere regards,
Andrew Berwick
Justiciar Knight Commander
Knights Templar Europe
Knights Templar Norway
 
I find it very ironic and very sad that a country that condemms us for our fight against terrorism and has openly called for a boycott against Israel has itself become a victim of terrorism.

Also, I read in the paper that the day before this attack, there was a "seminar" at the youth camp that dealt with the boycott on Israel and, in fact, one of the eyewitnesses said that when this bastard started shooting they thought it was a simulation of some of the "brutal tactics" of the "Israeli occupation".....

So while I truly grieve for the innocent lives lost in this monsterous attack, and condemm it without any reservation - and hope that this bastard gets the just punishment that he deserves on earth (as well as in the next world), I would suggest that the Norweigen government starts looking in their own backyards for brutality rather than in countries that are simply defending themselves against the very same terrorism that they are now experiencing.

I send my very sincerest condolences to the people of Norway and to my Norweigen friends on FYM - you did not deserve this!
 
I find it very ironic and very sad that a country that condemms us for our fight against terrorism and has openly called for a boycott against Israel has itself become a victim of terrorism.

Also, I read in the paper that the day before this attack, there was a "seminar" at the youth camp that dealt with the boycott on Israel and, in fact, one of the eyewitnesses said that when this bastard started shooting they thought it was a simulation of some of the "brutal tactics" of the "Israeli occupation".....

So while I truly grieve for the innocent lives lost in this monsterous attack, and condemm it without any reservation - and hope that this bastard gets the just punishment that he deserves on earth (as well as in the next world), I would suggest that the Norweigen government starts looking in their own backyards for brutality rather than in countries that are simply defending themselves against the very same terrorism that they are now experiencing.
Maybe we can have a rational discussion about this without filtering it through your, uh, uniquely right-wing, militaristic Israeli world view?
 
I find it very ironic and very sad that a country that condemms us for our fight against terrorism and has openly called for a boycott against Israel has itself become a victim of terrorism.

Also, I read in the paper that the day before this attack, there was a "seminar" at the youth camp that dealt with the boycott on Israel and, in fact, one of the eyewitnesses said that when this bastard started shooting they thought it was a simulation of some of the "brutal tactics" of the "Israeli occupation".....

So while I truly grieve for the innocent lives lost in this monsterous attack, and condemm it without any reservation - and hope that this bastard gets the just punishment that he deserves on earth (as well as in the next world), I would suggest that the Norweigen government starts looking in their own backyards for brutality rather than in countries that are simply defending themselves against the very same terrorism that they are now experiencing.

I send my very sincerest condolences to the people of Norway and to my Norweigen friends on FYM - you did not deserve this!

Of what I read both Palestinians and Israeli sides keeps the conflict going and have both done some nasty actions. I don't know why the Norwegian Labour Party strongly supports only Palestine. The arguments I've heard from Pro-Palestine activists is that Israel has a stronger military and are therefore slaughtering Palestinians.
The town I live in Tromsø has a status as City of Friendship with Palestine, I was hired to edit a video of a support arrangement to Palestine but it was impossible for me because I didn't agree with the anti-Israel & Pro-Palestine views. If there ever was a equally levelled debate about this issue under the arrangement, then it wasn't filmed by those I worked for.
 
Of what I read both Palestinians and Israeli sides keeps the conflict going and have both done some nasty actions. I don't know why the Norwegian Labour Party strongly supports only Palestine. The arguments I've heard from Pro-Palestine activists is that Israel has a stronger military and are therefore slaughtering Palestinians.
The town I live in Tromsø has a status as City of Friendship with Palestine, I was hired to edit a video of a support arrangement to Palestine but it was impossible for me because I didn't agree with the anti-Israel & Pro-Palestine views. If there ever was a equally levelled debate about this issue under the arrangement, then it wasn't filmed by those I worked for.

I thank you for your fairness and, again, I'm so very sorry that this horrible tragedy occured. I'm very glad that you and your loved ones are safe.

:hug:
 
Maybe we can have a rational discussion about this without filtering it through your, uh, uniquely right-wing, militaristic Israeli world view?

I do not think it is fair to state that AchtungBono is either right wing or militaristic and she has repeatedly stated that she favours a peace process between Israel and Palestinians.
 
I think we should probably leave analogies to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and debate out of this altogether.
 
From a column in today's Guardian:
[Breivik] was far from what we might term a traditional rightwing extremist. While he was profoundly concerned about the effects of immigration, multiculturalism, Islam and the growth of settled Muslim communities, he was also dismissive of crude racial supremacist and neo-Nazi ideas and parties that espoused these ideas, naming for example the British National Party (BNP).

It was, perhaps, his rejection of the BNP that prompted his interest in the English Defence League (EDL). While Breivik was impressed by the speed of their growth, he also praised "tactical choices" made by their leaders. This included an endorsement of the EDL's rejection of traditional white supremacist discourse and racism, and their decision to oppose Islam on cultural grounds. This distinction between traditional race-based forms of rightwing extremism (such as those of the BNP) and a new anti-Muslim narrative reflects a broader change within the European far right. Rather than oppose immigration and Islam on racial grounds (an argument that would attract little support), the emphasis shifts on to the more socially acceptable issue of culture: Muslims are not biologically inferior, but they are culturally incompatible, so the argument goes. The aim is to open modern far right groups up to a wider audience.

Like most within the far right, while Breivik expressed profound concern over an array of threats in wider society, he appeared to view the mainstream parties as either unwilling or unable to respond adequately. He was at one time a member of the rightwing Progress party that has also rallied against immigration and voiced criticism of Muslims, but he later denounced members of this party as "politically correct career politicians" who were not prepared to "take risks and work for idealistic goals". More broadly, Breivik was also fiercely opposed to the cultural influence of Marxism and "political correctness" and called on sections of the right to counter this influence by taking control of media and other positions of influence.
 
Just horrific. I have some extended family in Norway, and it's been heartbreaking to read their Facebook posts the last few days.
 
I do not think it is fair to state that AchtungBono is either right wing or militaristic and she has repeatedly stated that she favours a peace process between Israel and Palestinians.

Thank you for that Financeguy - I appreciate it.

I agree with Yolland, let's leave other issues out of this - and I apologize for inadverdantly bringing up the subject.

However, I was sick to my stomach this morning after reading that this butcher actually had pro-Israel feelings and he learned a lot about our government and the way it works and Israel was mentioned favorably at least 40 times in his manifesto.

Ugh!....I would rather deal with a sworn enemy than have someone like THAT on my side.
 
I do not think it is fair to state that AchtungBono is either right wing or militaristic and she has repeatedly stated that she favours a peace process between Israel and Palestinians.
I'm sure every rational human being on this planet favours a peace process, but that doesn't change your world view nor how you filter other events through it initially, does it?

I think we should probably leave analogies to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and debate out of this altogether.
I was hoping that as well, then I opened the thread to read a very selfish (intended as/masquerading as emphatic) post from AB.

I am very satisfied that Interference does not offer one the option of deleting previous posts, it says a lot about where a poster is coming from. Interesting how, after one day of exposition, the anti-Islamic narrative pushed by Fox News has also disappeared when the real killer has been revealed, eh? Not so convenient as the news cycle would lead you to believe, this world.
 
Just to add, it's incredible that this man is still alive considering the situation on the island with the SWAT team closing in. I almost want the trial to be closed-doors due to the nature and severity of the crime, but reading the live updates is equally fascinating :( I just feel more sick than anything else, to be honest.

EDIT: Account of the situation from a witness (translated to English): http://gunkies.org/blog/?p=91

{ 2011 07 24 }
Utøya: English version

If a single man can display so much hatred –
think only of how much love we all can display together.

– Stine Renate Håheim

I wrote a Norwegian post explaining my experience at Utøya. I had taken this blog for dead, and had entirely forgotten that it was syndicated on Planet Debian. I don’t want to let Google Translate make this disaster any worse than it is – the translation of “bullets” into “balls” being particularly bad – so the international attention the massacre has garnered in consideration, I am writing an English translation of my experiences. I feel somehow duty-bound to make people aware of what happened, but I don’t want to get into anything else but a sober description of the events and some very brief reflections. There are many details I have chosen to omit.

Others have written their experiences of the events at Utøya. I wanted to write mine down as well, and “get it out there”. Partly, I want to write this down because I’m unsure if I will remember all the details at a later point in time, although I think I’d prefer it if I couldn’t. I’m also writing this because people are asking about my experiences and it’s much better to have an URL to give them, lest I have to keep going through the same spiel over and over again.

Our former Prime Minister and current labour movement demigod Gro Harlem Brundtland had recently left the island. I had been the cameraman for a video interview of her talking about Utøya, and I was in the media group room encoding the video into a file suitable for YouTube, when someone else in the room startled and said that Twitter was full of messages about a loud explosion in Oslo. As the newspapers brought us information about the extent of the damages, a consensus arose that an informational meeting was in order. As soon as the current round of talks finished, we were gathered into the main hall.

The meeting was duly held, and after the statement was made that a TV feed would be made available, I took it upon myself as the local alpha geek to make it happen. Of course, the situation caused both the wireless network and the GPRS networks to become totally unusable. As I was waiting for someone to set up a password, I took the opportunity to face the consequences of having eaten two bits of a microwavable dish called “Hold-It” – the local equivalent of a Hot Pocket – and went to the toilet.

As I was in there, I first heard agitated shouting, then screams, then gunshots coming from just outside the toilets. More than anything else, it sounded like a toy gun. I was convinced that someone was making a joke in incredibly bad taste and I stormed out of the booth with the intent of halting it. As I tore the door open, I saw two of my comrades hiding in a recessed corner. Their facial expressions left absolutely no doubt that this was no toy. They signalled for me to get back in the booth. I closed the door, did a mental double-take in utter, complete confusion, and opened it again. They were still signalling. Had they not stood there, I would have run straight into the gunman; they saved my life. I looked out into the hallway, and I made eye contact with a young boy lying in a pool of blood. He was motioning for me to help him. I heard more gunshots from inside the building and retreated back inside.

As I was trying to think through my next move, I realized that the decidedly insubstantial wood-fiber door would not resist any kind of bullets. I made my way out into the hallway, with the intent of escaping outside. At that point, I was of course not aware that there was an intention to kill as many as possible, so I thought that the open spaces outside would be a place of relative safety. Of course, this proved to be wrong – and my life was probably saved a second time by one of the café volunteers taking me into a hard-to-spot employee’s bathroom.

We sat there for ninety minutes. Always ready to make a run for it, ready for just about anything. A peculiar group dynamic arose with these two people with whom I had barely previously spoken. We came to share a strange sense of common destiny and gallows humour. One of them had seen the shooter and described the police uniform. I perceived it to be realistic that we were the only ones aware of the wounded outside the toilet. I tried to reach the emergency services, but all their lines were busy; the terror attack in Oslo had probably clogged their lines. I finally got through to the fire services, who could inform me that the police did know about the situation and were on their way. This was to take 90 minutes – and by the time we evacuated, the young boy outside my door had perished. The despair I first saw in his eyes as I passed him, fleeing from one room to the other – and the empty, blank stare as we left, are burned into me and they are images I will never in my life forget.

Finally, the real police arrived. We walked out. I chose the path through the minor conference hall – something I now regret. The sight was simply beyond my capacity to describe fully, and so terrifying that I barely remember the sight – only the terror it struck in me. There were several people bunched up in a corner, a big amorphous heap of bodies. Some were conscious and yelled at me not to do anything that could startle the police, others lay still. Their bodies were all covered in blood, and a thick pool of blood extended at least a half-metre in all directions around them. The policeman across the hall was screaming orders at me, but he was screaming so loudly that I couldn’t make out his words at first.

We were first moved into the camp newspaper’s offices. There were about eight of us there, I think, in addition to one girl who lay wounded. Towards the end she was drifting in and out of consciousness. We covered her with sweaters to keep her warm and one of us tried to at least temper her bleeding. The bullet had missed her heart, but by the entry wound it was clear that it was not by far. I do not know who this girl was or how she is now. I sat behind and never saw her face. The wounded were evacuated first. I don’t remember how long we remained; I had lost all concept of time.

In spite of protests from the group who knew him, one kid was put in handcuffs. At the time I didn’t understand why, and the policeman seemed to say something almost to the effect that there was no reason for it at all. I didn’t see when they undid his cuffs, but I remember thinking that this treatment made a terrible experience even worse for him. I tried my best to comfort him but knew it would be little help. Later, when things stabilised a little, we were told that he was handcuffed because he had come from an unsecured area. The police was extremely good at carefully explaining what was happening and why; this was a big help and I am grateful for it.

Eventually we were moved out into the main corridor of the building, where we joined up into a group of about fifty. Only when I saw the two people who saved my life did any emotion other than mild confusion arise. I broke down shivering in tears in one of their arms. After a few seconds, I came back to my senses and realised that this was not the time. I quickly gathered myself, got the shaking under control, and sat down. We were given some chocolate and soda from the kiosk. I remember making an offhand remark that an inability to find joy in free candy was a sure sign of a bad situation. We all laughed out loud. Gallows humour is a coping mechanism, but in retrospect one almost feels guilty for it.

We were shown out in a single file with hands above our heads. I remember an intense concern that someone would slip in the steep, muddy slope and create a misunderstanding. Outside, there were more bodies. Some under improvised covers – a tarpaulin from the waffle stand, the deflated bouncy castle – but some simply lay there.

Everyone I met displayed a courage, a mental discipline and unity of purpose far beyond anything one would ever wish to expect from people this young. Everyone conducted themselves with an attitude that could almost be described as “stiff upper lip”.

Safely across the fjord we were offered blankets. I was asked if I was aware of any injuries, and asked to lift my shirt and show my abdominal region. We were shown into the bus which took us to the hotel used by the survivors and their family. I simply cannot describe in any words the relief I felt when I was able to embrace my living comrades. It was completely unlike anything I had ever felt before in my life. The euphoric feeling was tempered only by the realisation that there would be many I could never see again, comrades whom I had taken great pride in calling my friends, with futures in the service of all mankind, futures I had previously found such great joy in pondering and guessing about. The feeling which continues to upset me the most, is the feeling that so many of my comrades left behind grieving families and friends. Torn away senselessly.

I do not know how much more than this relatively sober account of the events on Utøya I can muster. I would, however, like to offer some reflections.

First of all, from the bottom of my heart, I want to thank the police who saved the lives of so many still on the island, the holidaymakers who took aboard swimmers into their boats – and the rescue services staffed primarily by volunteers who have spared no effort in trying to soften the blow as much as they can. The opportunity to spend time with those comrades who underwent the same experience as myself has also been an immeasurable aid. I was also so relieved to find my very closest friend among the survivors, which has also been an indescribable help.

If I can name a single positive in this tragedy: Had he arrived with his automatic weapon fifteen or twenty minutes prior, he would have arrived during the informational meeting, at a time when the major hall was absolutely jam-packed – the death toll would be many times what it ended up being. I am agonisingly aware of the meager comfort this provides to those who have been bereft of their closest, but I do find some solace in this.

We cannot sweep under a rug that this was – without question! – a political attack on the labour movement. But it is thankfully also an attack which has been perceived by everyone as an attack on the Norwegian society, and on a symbol of the wide recruitment to the participatory democracy which lies at our very national soul. I cannot thank the Norwegian people, and indeed the people in other nations who have offered their condolences, enough for their shows of support and shared grief. It really has been a tremendous help to me knowing that so many people feel with us.

I also want to thank from the bottom of my heart the rock-steadiness of everyone in both the national and local wings of the Labour Party and Labour Youth in supporting us, and the political milieu in general for their resolute steadfastness saving me from losing yet more that I cherish; our freedoms in a participatory democracy.

Our Party has lost many of its very brightest youngsters. Personally I feel an angry spite, a deep restless urge to get the wheels of society going again. I want to show his kind that we will not be broken. We’re stronger than that. I will not be frightened into silence and passivity. I want to remember the dead, and honor them by carrying on our common work.

I want to end this with a request to everyone who reads this, echoing a statement I read by one of my good friends and comrades: Please, don’t let me see any messages of hatred, wishes for the death penalty, anything like that. If anyone should be of the belief that anything will improve by murdering this sad little person, they would be profoundly wrong. All attention now should be plowed into caring for those victims and their relatives who did not share my luck, and not giving an audience to a perpetrator who wants one.

Tore Sinding Bekkedal
 
I don't understand why some people are wondering if Norway would be less open following the attacks. I think Norwegians would be less open to right wing thought after all this. Maybe I'm naive, but I doubt the average Norwegian would suddenly hate Muslims just because an ethnic Norwegian killed nearly 100 people.
 
compared to this, the world of sports is inconsequential. but this was a storybook victory, not dissimilar to the Japanese women's soccer team:

Norwegian wins world swimming title in wake of Oslo massacre

SHANGHAI (AP) -- For a minute or two, Norwegian swimmer Alexander Dale Oen was able to block out the massacre that has traumatized his home country and focus on nothing but the pool.

As soon as he won the gold in the men's 100-meter breaststroke on Monday, however, he pointed to the Norwegian flag on his cap and then rose out of the water and flexed his biceps - a show of strength to his countrymen back home.

"We need to stay united," he said. "Everyone back home now is of course paralyzed with what happened but it was important for me to symbolize that even though I'm here in China, I'm able to feel the same emotions."

Dale Oen won in a time of 58.71 seconds, with Italy's Fabio Scozzoli taking silver in 59.42 and Cameron van der Burgh of South Africa winning the bronze in 59.49.

The Norwegain, the silver medalist in the same event at the 2008 Olympics, said it's been incredibly difficult for him to concentrate on swimming this week in the wake of the bombing and shooting spree in Norway that killed 93 people.

He's been asked repeatedly about the attacks and teared up several times. At the press conference following his victory, he wore a black piece of tape around the sleeve of his T-shirt, just below the Norwegian flag.

"I guess I was racing a little bit more with my heart today than I was technically," he said.

Dale Oen said the Norwegian team has comforted one another throughout the week, and in the hours leading up to his race, they tried to focus on "positive feelings and a positive atmosphere."

"I just tried to use what happened back home as fuel and try to think that we just need to push forward and we really need just to let everyday life come back. We can't let this guy ruin the future for us," he added, referring to Anders Behring Breivik, the right-wing extremist who has confessed to the twin terrorist attacks.

On the medal stand, though, the feelings came rushing back and he wiped away a tear.

"I was just thinking about those back home and seeing the flag and hearing the national anthem, really," he said. "Even though it's been three or four days now, it's still a shock."

Swimming Norwegian wins world swimming title in wake of Oslo massacre | Universal Sports
 
From the Telegraph's minute-by-minute updates:

Further quotes from Jens Breivik, the father of Anders:
I think that ultimately he should have taken his own life rather than kill so many people. I will never have any more contact with him. [Yes, these are strong words from a father about his son] but when I think of what happened, I'm filled with despair. I still don't understand how something like this could happen. No-one normal could do that.
 
I officially find Glenn Beck disgusting. Before I found him annoying, but now he is at the bottom of my list and will stay there for a long time.
 
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