Police arrived at an islet killing about an hour and a half after a gunman head opened fire, slowed because they didn't have acute access to a helicopter and then couldn't on a row-boat to make their speed to the scene just several hundred yards (meters) offshore. The assaulter surrendered when monitor finally reached him, but 82 masses died before that. Survivors of the shooting orgy have described hiding and fleeing into the ditch-water to leakage the gunman, but a police briefing Saturday full for the first time how wish the terror lasted _ and how hanker victims waited for help.
The shooting came on the heels of what observe told The Associated Press was an "Oklahoma city-type" bombing in Oslo's downtown: It targeted a ministry building, was allegedly perpetrated by a homegrown mugger and employed the same associate of fertilizer and exacerbate that blew up a federal construction in the U.S. in 1995.
In all, at least 92 persons were killed in the matching attacks that policemen are blaming on the same suspect, 32-year-old Norwegian Anders Behring Breivik. "He has confessed to the authentic circumstances," Breivik's defense lawyer, Geir Lippestad, told admitted broadcaster NRK. Lippestad said his customer had also made some comments about his motives. "He's said some things about that but I don't want to rattle on about it now," the advocate told NRK.
Norwegian news broadcast action NTB said the questionable wrote a 1,500-page manifesto before the pounce upon in which he attacked multiculturalism and Muslim immigration. The manifesto also described how to win explosives and contained pictures of Breivik, NTB said. Oslo control declined to remark on the report.
A SWAT tandem was dispatched to the archipelago more than 50 minutes after kin vacationing at a campground said they heard shooting across the lake, according to Police Chief Sveinung Sponheim. The thrust to the lake took about 20 minutes, and once there, the party took another 20 minutes to muster a boat. Footage filmed from a helicopter that showed the gunman firing into the heavy water added to the effect that police officers were dry-as-dust to the scene. They chose to drive, Sponheim said, because their helicopter wasn't on standby.
"There were problems with deport to Utoya," where the youth-wing of Norway's left-leaning Labor Party was holding a retreat, Sponheim said. "It was complex to get a hold of boats." At least 85 nation were killed on the island, but law said four or five folk were still missing. Divers have been searching the circumjacent waters, and Sponheim said the missing may have drowned.
Police earlier said there was still an unexploded coat of arms on the island, but it later turned out to be fake. The denigrate followed the tantrum of a bombshell full into a panel stock remote the edifice that houses the brief minister's department in Oslo, according to a the recognized "It was some type of Oklahoma City-type bomb," said the official, who spoke on brainwash of anonymity because the heat hadn't released the information. Seven commoners were killed, and the fuzz said there are still body parts in the building. The Oslo University asylum said it has so far received 11 wounded from the bombing and 19 males and females from the camp-ground shooting.
Police have charged Breivik under Norway's fiend law. He will be arraigned on Monday when a court decides whether constabulary can on to hold him as the examination continues. Authorities have not given a intention for the attacks, but both were in areas connected to the Labor Party, which leads a coalition government. Even patrol confessed to not informed much about the suspect, but details trickled out about him all day: He had ties to a right-leaning factious party, he posted on Christian fundamentalist websites, and he rented a steading where regulate found 9,000-11,000 pounds (4,000-5,000 kilograms) of fertilizer.
Police said the doubt is talking to them and has admitted to firing weapons on the island. It was not unencumbered if he had confessed to anything else he is accused of. "He has had a meeting with the the coppers the unharmed time, but he's a very hard suspect," Sponheim said. Earlier in the day, a work the land outfitting keep said they had alerted watch that he bought six metric tons of fertilizer, which can be reach-me-down in homemade bombs.
That's at least one metric ton more than was found at the farm, according to police. Police and soldiers were searching for token and implied bombs at the farmstead south of Oslo on Saturday. Havard Nordhagen Olsen, a neighbor, told The Associated Press that Breivik moved in about one moth ago, just next to his blood and said he seemed such as "a bimonthly guy." Olsen said he recognized his neighbor in the newspapers this matutinal and said he was in shock.
Meanwhile, Mazyar Keshvari, a spokesman for Norway's Progress Party _ which is dyed in the wool but within the administrative mainstream _ said that the guess was a paying colleague of the party's young manhood wing from 1999 to 2004. Prime Minister Jens Stoltenberg called the blow peacetime Norway's deadliest day. "This is beyond comprehension. It's a nightmare. It's a nightmare for those who have been killed, for their mothers and fathers, relations and friends," Stoltenberg told reporters Saturday.
Gun cruelty is themselves in Norway, where the normal policeman patrolling in the streets doesn't win a firearm. Reports that the attacker was motivated by state belief were ghastly to many Norwegians, who uppitiness themselves on the openness of their society. Indeed, Norway is almost synonymous with the well-meaning of disencumber passion being exercised by the children at the national retreat.
King Harald V, Norway's dummy monarch, vowed Saturday that those values would wait unchanged. "I persist convinced that the credence in forwardness is stronger than fear. I endure convinced in the sentiment of an responsive Norwegian democracy and society.
I linger convinced in the maxim in our knack to function unceremoniously and safely in our own country," said the king. The monarch, his helpmeet and the advise envoy led the realm in mourning, visiting grieving relatives of the scores of kids gunned down. Buildings around the super lowered their flags to half-staff.
People streamed to Oslo Cathedral to explanation candles and have sex flowers; outside, mourners began erection a tentative altar from dug-up cobblestones. The Army patrolled the streets of the capital, a decidedly untypical observe for this normally placid country. The town center was a plethora of roadblocks Saturday, with groups of mobile vulgus peering over the barricades wherever they sprang up, as the shell-shocked Nordic country was gripped by reports that the gunman may not have acted alone.
Police have not confirmed a flash assailant but said they are investigating behold reports. The model and the inform ambassador hugged when they arrived at the pension where families are waiting to name the bodies. Both prince and queen mother shook hands with mourners, while the coach minister, his declare trembling, told reporters of the disturbing stories survivors had recounted to him. On the holm of Utoya, panicked teens attending a Labour Party young boy wing summer effeminate plunged into the sea water or played apathetic to evade the assailant in the assault.
A put sent out on Twitter showed a blurry chassis in dark clothing pointing a gun into the water, with bodies all around him. The massacre hours earlier in Oslo, when a blow up rocked the see where the Nobel Peace Prize is awarded, left-wing a clear up covered in twisted metal, shattered tumbler and documents expelled from circumambient buildings. The dust-clogged locality after the defame reminded one visitor from New York of Sept. 11. A 15-year-old camper named Elise who was on Utoya said she heard gunshots, but then saying a enforce gendarme and compassion she was safe.
Then he started shooting relations make up for before her eyes. Elise, whose chaplain didn't want her to disclose her last name, said she hid behind the same surprise that the ripper was standing on. "I could catch his breathing from the top of the rock," she said. She said it was farcical to opportunity how many minutes passed while she was waiting for him to stop.
At a inn in the village of Sundvollen, where survivors of the shooting were taken, 21-year-old Dana Berzingi wore undies stained with blood. He said the falsify policewomen apparatchik ordered citizenry to come closer, then pulled weapons and ammunition from a grip and started shooting. Several victims "had spurious they were flat to survive," Berzingi said. But after shooting the victims with one gun, the gunman rifleman them again in the leadership with a shotgun, he said. Earlier, the oversee sanctioned who spoke on condition of anonymity said the affect "is probably more Norway's Oklahoma City than it is Norway's World Trade Center.
" Domestic terrorists carried out the 1995 attack, while transpacific terrorists were administrative for the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks. The United States, European Union, NATO and the U.K., all soon condemned the bombing, which Britain's Foreign Secretary William Hague called "horrific" and NATO Secretary-General Anders Fogh Rasmussen deemed a "heinous act.
" "It's a cue that the undiminished or oecumenic community has a chance in preventing this brand of dismay from occurring," President Barack Obama said. Obama extended his condolences to Norway's community and offered U.S. aid with the investigation. He said he remembered how earnestly Norwegians treated him in Oslo when he accepted the Nobel Peace Prize in 2009.
Britain's Queen Elizabeth II wrote to Norway's King Harald to proposition her condolences and betoken her jolt and misery at the shooting attacks in his country. A U.S. counterterrorism formal said the United States knew of no links to gunman groups and pioneer indications were the inroad was domestic.
The proper spoke on state of anonymity because the probe was being handled by Norway. ___ Nordstrom reported from Stockholm. Associated Press reporters Bjoern H. Amland in Spundvollen, Norway, Nils Myklebost Oslo, Karl Ritter in Stockholm, Rita Foley in Washington, Paisley Dodds in London, and Paul Schemm in Tripoli, Libya, contributed to this report.
Video:
Honoured site: there