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  • 1
    Jun
    2012
    4:13am, EDT

    Norway prison seeks 'friends' to play hockey, chess with mass killer Breivik

    Heiko Junge / NTB Scanpix via Reuters

    Anders Behring Breivik, left, sits next to his lawyer Tord Jordet during his trial in a courtroom in Oslo on Tuesday.

    By Ian Johnston, msnbc.com

    A Norwegian prison is looking to hire people to be friends with mass killer Anders Behring Breivik, according to reports.

    Ila prison hopes to find people willing to play hockey, chess and otherwise interact with Breivik, who is on trial for massacring 77 people in a bomb attack in Oslo and a shooting at a summer camp for young people on Utoeya island in July last year.


    Citing Norway's Verdens Gang, the U.K.’s Telegraph newspaper reported that the "friends" would be trained experts as Breivik, 33, is feared to be too dangerous to mix with other prisoners.

    "It could be anything from a team for indoor hockey to people who are willing to play chess with him," Knut Bjarkeid, director of the Ila prison said, according to the Telegraph's translation.

    Tens of thousands of people gathered in Oslo to sing a children's song calling for peace, as a protest against mass killer Anders Behring Breivik. Msnbc.com's Dara Brown reports.

    Man sets himself on fire outside Breivik courthouse

    Bjarkeid said it was feared that Breivik might take other prisoners hostage in an attempt to escape if he was allowed near them. The killer is expected to serve at least 21 years in prison.

    Under Norway's laws, prisoners cannot be kept in isolation for a long time as that is considered to be unduly cruel, the AFP news agency said.

    "Many of the initiatives around Breivik are designed to prevent hostage-taking," Bjarkeid told Verdens Gang. "This makes it impossible to provide normal contact with others."

    Tears as victim's brother throws shoe at Norway mass killer Anders Breivik

    Bjarkeid added while Breivik appeared calm in court, he was still a threat. "He is a soldier in phase three of his own war. He still behaves exactly as he himself has described in his manifesto."

    More world news from msnbc.com and NBC News:

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    Follow us on Twitter: @msnbc_world

     

    423 comments

    Just give the bastard a glass of Christian Kool Aid and tell him to have a fuked day....

    Show more
    Explore related topics: norway, hockey, prison, chess, friends, featured, hire, breivik
  • 15
    May
    2012
    5:51pm, EDT

    Man sets himself on fire outside Breivik courthouse

    Stian Lysberg Solum / AP

    Anders Behring Breivik stands between two police officers prior to taking his seat after a break in the courtroom in Oslo on May 15, 2012.

    By Reuters

    A man set himself on fire and tried to force his way into the Norwegian courthouse where far-right mass killer Anders Behring Breivik is on trial for massacring 77 people last July, police said on Tuesday.

    The man, who appeared to be a white Norwegian in his 50s, doused himself with liquid and set himself on fire before shouting at police officers and rushing toward a gate in the security perimeter, witnesses and police said. There was no indication of a motive.

    Breivik has been on trial in Oslo since last month for killing eight people with a car bomb, then shooting dead 69 more, most of them teenagers, at a Labour Party island summer camp in protest against immigration and multiculturalism.


    Although reaction to the trial has been mostly calm, days of harrowing testimony from survivors of Norway's worst peacetime massacre have raised the tension, and last week the brother of a man gunned down by Breivik hurled a shoe at him in court.

    Tears as victim's brother throws shoe at Norway mass killer Anders Breivik

    Witnesses quoted by the news agency NRK said the burning man had shouted "Shoot me! Shoot me!" before he was tackled by police, who poured water over him.

    However, a journalist at the scene said he may have shouted "Put me out!", which sounds similar in Norwegian.

    Police spokesman Kjell Kverme said the man, who appeared to be a Caucasian Norwegian, had been taken to the hospital with serious injuries to his torso.

    A video of the incident posted by the daily newspaper VG on its website shows the man, with flames coming from his hat and sweatshirt, walking toward the barrier and shouting at officers.

    He then turns and rushes toward the security checkpoint, where heavily armed officers wrestle him to the ground and rip his burning clothes off.

    Slideshow: Norway in mourning after massacre

    Moshen Nouni, who works at a kebab shop across from the courthouse, said water had been poured on the man before he was rushed to hospital.

    Inside the courtroom, witnesses continued to describe how Breivik hunted down his victims on Utoya island, often taking them down with the first shot then finishing them off with a shot to the head.

    Breivik admits carrying out the killings but has said they were necessary to protect Norway against "traitors" who deserved death for embracing left-wing values including immigration and multiculturalism.

    He has said he should either be executed or acquitted, calling the prospect of a prison sentence "pathetic" and an insanity ruling "worse than death".

    One court-appointed team of psychiatrists concluded he was psychotic while a second team came to the opposite conclusion.

    If he is deemed sane, Breivik faces a 21-year jail sentence with indefinite extensions for as long as he is considered dangerous.

    More world news from msnbc.com and NBC News:

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    • Mexico's drug war: No sign of 'light at the end of the tunnel'

    Follow us on Twitter: @msnbc_world

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    8 comments

    Setting yourself on fire isn't a very smart way to make a point. WTF??

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    Explore related topics: norway, set-on-fire, breivik, utoya
  • 20
    Apr
    2012
    7:48pm, EDT

    Norway's Breivik gives 'terrifying' testimony

    Friends and family of his victims looked on Friday as Anders Breivik calmly describes chasing down and killing dozens of teenagers during a shooting spree last year on Utoya Island in Norway. Msnbc.com's Al Stirrett reports.

    Norwegian mass killer Andres Breivik testified in an Oslo court Friday on the meticulous planning and execution of the plot that left 77 dead last summer, the Christian Science Monitor reported. He first warned people to leave the courtroom because his testimony might distress them.

    Breivik explained how he arrived on the island of Utøya on July 22 and calmly and methodically executed Labor party youth members, many who stood paralyzed in fear as he shot them with a Glock pistol and Ruger semi-automatic rifle.

    "I thought 'It's now or never,'" said a red-faced but composed Breivik, referring to his thoughts before taking his first victim. "A hundred voices in my head said, 'Don’t do this.'"

    Read the entire Christian Science Monitor report here.

    More world news from msnbc.com and NBC News:

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    Follow us on Twitter: @msnbc_world

    21 comments

    Also Ayers never killed anybody. He was protesting an illegal war that was responsible for the murder of countless Americans and Vietnamese.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: norway, crime, featured, extremist, breivik

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