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Friday, 24 August 2012

Anders Behring Breivik Jailed For 21 Years

The man who killed 77 people in Norway last year smirks as he is jailed for a minimum of 10 years.

 Judge's Ruling On Killer Breivik
Bjorn Kasper Ilaug
Bjorn Kasper Ilaug, who rescued young people from the island of Utoya, tells Sky News he is relieved by the verdict will see Anders Behring Breivik jailed.
 Utoya Rescuer: 'Justice Is Done
 
     
     
Norwegian mass killer Anders Behring Breivik smirked in court as he was jailed for 21 years after a judge ruled he was "not insane".
The five-judge panel in Oslo convicted Breivik of terrorism and premeditated murder for bomb and gun attacks that killed 77 people last year.
Reading the unanimous ruling, Judge Wenche Elisabeth Arntzen handed down the sentence of "preventive detention" with a minimum of at least 10 years.
Breivik's lawyers have said he will not appeal the verdict but prosecutors have not yet decided on whether they will challenge the ruling.
The maximum sentence allowed under Norwegian law is 21 years but such sentences can be extended as long as an inmate is considered too dangerous to be released.
Breivik, who walked into the courtroom with a clench-fist salute, looked pleased as the judge read the ruling. It is exactly what he wanted - a ruling that portrayed him as a political terrorist rather than a psychotic mass murderer.
Lawyers for the 33-year-old right-wing extremist said before the decision that Breivik would appeal any insanity ruling, which he said would be "worse than death" but accept a prison sentence.
Labour Party secretary Raymond Johansen, centre, hugs a relative of a Utoya massacre victim.
Labour Party secretary Raymond Johansen hugs a relative of a Utoya victim
"He says he won't appeal now that he has been found sane," Breivik's defence lawyer Geir Lippestad told journalists outside the courtroom during a break in the proceedings.
Another of Breivik's lawyers said the verdict was not a surprise.
As judges took turns reading sections of the 90-page ruling, people were crying inside the courtroom as they relived the horror of the killing spree.
Some who lost loved ones in the attacks welcomed the ruling.
"Now we won't hear about him for quite a while. Now we can have peace and quiet," Per Balch Soerensen, whose daughter was among those killed in the shooting massacre, told Denmark's TV2.
"He doesn't mean anything to me, he is just air."
A survivor of the Utoya Island attack, Tore Bekkedal, said more important than the outcome of the trial was the way the whole process was conducted, "in accordance with the standards of our society".
"Everyone has been determined to prove the strength of the values of our society, the very values he attacked."
He added: "We didn't want to grant him the satisfaction of seeing us abandon our principles and abandon what we believe in simply because he tried to tell us to."
Bjorn Kasper Ilaug, who rescued 24 youngsters from the island of Utoya, told Sky News he was relieved by the verdict.
"I hoped for this. It means we can move forward and justice is done. I hope the Norwegian authorities do not appeal this verdict."
Sky News reporter Trygve Sorvaag, who was inside court, said the people of Norway are pleased with the verdict, which has strengthened their belief in the justice system. Tweets expressed how Norwegians could now move on after the harrowing massacre.
Breivik admits detonating a bomb outside the office of Prime Minister Jens Stoltenberg, killing eight people, and then driving to the island of Utoya where he shot dead 69 people at a Labour party summer camp.
As well as those who died, 242 were injured. The youngest victim was just 14 years old.
Judge Arne Lyng noted that the fertliser bomb that Breivik set off outside the government headquarters could have been more devastating.
"It was pure luck that not many more were killed," Lyng said.
Breivik admits carrying out the attacks but says he was well aware of his actions, describing them as "cultural self-defence" to halt the "Islamisation" of Norway.
His lawyers say Breivik is already at work writing sequels to the 1,500-page manifesto he released on the internet before the attacks.

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