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BREIVIK

Norway hails Breivik verdict

Relieved survivors of Anders Behring Breivik's massacres took to Twitter on Friday to express their delight moments after he was sentenced to 21 years in prison for killing 77 people last year.

Norway hails Breivik verdict
Bjørn Kasper Ilaug, who picked up survivors in his boat, welcomed Friday's verdict (Photo: Anette Karlsen/Scanpix).

"YEEEEEEESSSSSSSS!!!", said Emma Martinovic, while Viljar Hansse, who took one of Breivik's bullets to the head on Utøya Island, tweeted: "Finished. Period."

"This crap is finally over. Life can start now," another Utøya survivor, Ingrid Nymoen, said on the micro-blogging website.

"I'm going to fully live the first day of the rest of my life," said Frida Holm Skoglund.

The Oslo court's unanimous verdict found Breivik responsible for "acts of terror" in setting off a bomb in the Norwegian capital that killed eight people and then shooting 69 more, mainly teenagers attending a Labour Party summer camp, on the island.

Knut Storberget, who was Norway's justice minister at the time of the attacks, hailed the verdict, telling television channel TV2: "It's a good basis for him to stay in prison for the rest of his life."

"It's the heaviest sentence he could get."

"It's a good and correct ruling," tabloid VG wrote in an editorial on its online edition.

"Anders Behring Breivik knew what he was doing, that it was evil," it added.

"It is morally right that he who does wrong should be held responsible."

Judges had to decide whether the 33-year-old loner, who had confessed to the attacks, was sane or insane when he carried them out on July 22nd last year.

He claimed he was pursuing a mission against Europe's "Muslim invasion" and all those who promote multiculturalism.

The prosecution said he should be put in closed psychiatric care — contrary to what Breivik wanted or what most of the families of the victims and the general public in Norway desired.

"I'm very pleased by this verdict, it lends credibility to the Norwegian justice system, Bjørn Kasper Ilaug, whose boat picked up terrified teenagers trying to swim away from Utøya, told AFP.

"A person who prepares attacks like this for so long and so precisely can only be of sound mind."

"Justice has been done, that's the main thing," another survivor, Tore Sinding Bekkedal, told journalists.

Even though it was difficult for families of the victims to again listen to the horrific details of the massacre in court on Friday, most Norwegians expressed their relief and satisfaction that the whole case was finally over.

"I'm very relieved, I feel that justice was done," said Unni Espeland Marcussen, who lost her 17-year-old daughter Andrine on Utøya, in a post on the website of the daily Aftenposten.

Breivik "will have to take responsibility for everything he did and serve his prison term," she added. "And that seems right to me, because I think he knew what he was doing."

Psychiatrist Kjersti Narud told the NTB news agency that the verdict was fair.

"Breivik showed a high degree of consistency during his detention," she said.

"I can't rule out that he might have been suffering from psychosis at the time of the attacks, but if he was, it could not have been extreme enough to exempt him from criminal responsibility."

Defence lawyers said that Breivik would not appeal the verdict, although the prosecution still has the right to do so.

"If there's no appeal, it means we will have peace, there'll be no need to mobilize for a new trial," Marcussen said. "We can then mourn more deeply … it'll be good to put it all behind us."

Other reactions from abroad on Twitter were more mixed, but mainly saying they could not understand that Breivik was given "only" 21 years in jail.   

Under Norwegian law his sentence, though it is the maximum for the charges against him, can be extended indefinitely for as long as he is deemed to be a danger to society.

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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.