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BREIVIK

Norway ‘received phone threat before attacks’

The Norwegian government received a phone threat just months before the July 22nd twin attacks that killed 77 people, but police were not alerted to the call, public radio station NRK reported on Friday.

A man with the same refined tones as the gunman Anders Behring Breivik spoke calmly about shooting members of the youth wing of the Labour Party, said the radio station.

He also mentioned a manifesto during the phone call to the government in March 2011.

Due to the disturbing contents of the call, the receptionist detailed it on a written note, but this was never transmitted to police, the Norwegian government services centre said.

"The call was never considered as a real threat but more like a vague and incoherent conversation," Margot Vaagdal, head of the centre's communications, told AFP.

It was only after Behring Breivik's attacks that the police were alerted as the centre "found that a part of what was said was perhaps relevant for the case," said Vaagdal, although she would not confirm details of the call.

On July 22nd, the 32-year-old right-wing extremist first set off a car bomb outside government buildings in Oslo, killing eight people.

He then went to Utøya, some 40 kilometres north-west of Oslo, where, disguised as a police officer, he methodically shot and killed another 69 people attending a summer camp, most of them teenagers.

On the same day, he published on the internet a lengthy manifesto in which he expounded his Islamophobic and anti-multicultural views.

According to NRK, the receptionist had detailed the nature of threats, the name of the caller, his phone number and date.

The government services centre said it did not know if the caller was Behring Breivik himself, and that the note was somewhere in one of the buildings hit by the extremist's bomb.

Meanwhile, newspaper Aftenposten said that the gunman rang a ministry in May or June 2010 to obtain a list of the movements of different political parties' youth wings.

Quoting details from a police hearing of an official from the ministry, the newspaper said that the information requested by Behring Breivik was not released to him as the ministry did not have such details.

Court-appointed psychiatrists have concluded that Behring Breivik was criminally insane and therefore not accountable for his actions.

He is currently being held under provisional detention while awaiting the trial which opens on April 16th.

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BREIVIK

Norway mosque shooter ‘has admitted the facts’: Police

A Norwegian man suspected of killing his step sister and opening fire in a mosque near Oslo last weekend, has admitted to the crimes though he has not officially entered a plea, police said on Friday.

Norway mosque shooter 'has admitted the facts': Police
Philip Manshaus appears in court on August 12. Photo: Cornelius Poppe / NTB Scanpix / AFP
Philip Manshaus, 21, was remanded in custody Monday, suspected of murder and a “terrorist act” that police say he filmed himself committing.
   
Answering police questions on Friday, “the suspect admits the facts but has not taken a formal position as to the charges,” Oslo police official Pal-Fredrik Hjort Kraby said in a statement.
   
Manshaus is suspected of murdering his 17-year-old step sister Johanne Zhangjia Ihle-Hansen, before entering the Al-Noor mosque in an affluent Oslo suburb and opening fire before he was overpowered by a 65-year-old man.
   
Just three worshippers were in the mosque at the time, and there were no serious injuries.
   
Manshaus appeared in court this week with two black eyes and scrapes and bruises to his face, neck and hands.
   
Police have said he has “extreme right views” and “xenophobic positions” and that he had filmed the mosque attack with a camera mounted on a helmet. He had initially denied the accusations.
   
The incident came amid a rise in white supremacy attacks around the world, including the recent El Paso massacre in the United States.
   
Norway witnessed one of the worst-ever attacks by a rightwing extremist in July 2011, when Anders Behring Breivik, who said he feared a “Muslim invasion”, killed 77 people in a truck bomb blast near government offices in Oslo and a shooting spree at a Labour Party youth camp on the island of Utøya.