Norway on
Sunday paused to commemorate the 77 victims of a bomb and gun massacre that
shocked the peaceful nation one year ago, a tragedy that the prime minister
said had brought Norwegians together in defense of democracy and tolerance.
Anders
Behring Breivik, a 33-year-old far-right fanatic, has admitted to the July 22,
2011, attacks: a bombing of the government district in Oslo, killing eight, and
a shooting rampage that left 69 dead at the left-wing Labor Party's youth camp
on Utoya island.
In a
wreath-laying ceremony at the bomb site, Prime Minister Jens Stoltenberg said
Breivik had failed in his declared goal of destroying Norway's commitment to
being an inclusive, multicultural society.
"The
bomb and the gun shots were meant to change Norway," Stoltenberg told a
somber crowd of a few hundred people at the ceremony. "The Norwegian
people answered by embracing our values. The perpetrator lost. The people
won."
Tarps were
still covering the windows of bomb-damaged buildings on the plaza, and large
cement road blocks stop all but pedestrian traffic. Mounted police and officers
with bomb-sniffing dogs were on the site, but the security was not overbearing,
as if to show that Norway was still an open society.
The police
investigation showed Breivik set off a fertilizer bomb that tore the facade of
the high-rise that housed the government's headquarters, and drove toward Utoya
unhindered as chaos reigned in the capital. Arriving on Utoya disguised as a
police officer and armed with a handgun and assault rifle, he unleashed a
shooting massacre that sent panicked teenagers fleeing into a chilly lake or
hiding behind rocks to save their lives. More than half of the victims were
teenagers — the youngest had turned 14 five days earlier.
Survivors
were gathering for a private ceremony on the island Sunday, while Norway's
royal family and government leaders attended a church service in Oslo, where a
memorial concert was planned later in the day.
During the
10-week trial that ended in June, Breivik admitted to the attacks, but declined
criminal guilt out of principle, saying the victims were traitors for embracing
immigration and making Norway a multicultural society.
Prosecutors
said Breivik was psychotic and should be sent to compulsory psychiatric care
while Breivik's defense lawyers argued that he was sane. The Oslo district
court is set to deliver its ruling on Aug. 24.
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