ძაან კარგი.
ასეთი იდეურ მანიაკებს უფრო ვერ ვიტან და მეზიზღება ვიდრე ვიღაც ცოტა ტვინ ნაღრძობი მანიაკი. ის შეურაცხადი მაინცაა.
ესენი კიდე რაღაც კაზიავკების შთაბეჭდილებას ტოვებენ.
12.12 Does he expect another attack? "He believes this is the start of a war that will go on for 60 years. But his mind is very... I won't go on. He believes the other cells will continue the war. He looks upon himself as a warrior, and takes some kind of pride in starting this war."
12.11 Did he surrender to police? Why? "I can confirm that he surrendered, but I don't know yet why." Has he had any sort of injury from being manhandled by police? "No, no injury."
12.10 The other mooted cells are part of the "so-called Knights Templar movement". How did he trigger the bomb? "It's too complicated for me to answer."
12.09 Why did he go to Britain? "It's too early in the case, I don't know." How did he communicate with other cells? "I can't comment, because I don't know."
12.08 Is the "manifesto" biographically accurate? "I don't know." He would like to be able to read some of it during his court case, but "whether he will be allowed to, I don't know."
12.07 "In his mind, he succeeded", he says. "He expected to be stopped earlier in the day, for police to get to him at the time of the bombing. He was surprised to get to the island."
12.06 Shouldn't you tell him that you're a member of the Labour party, since he has shown so much hate towards it? "He hates everyone who is democratic. Everyone who is not extreme, he will hate."
12.05 Has he shown any empathy to the victims? "No. He's sorry he had to do it, but he had to do it because he is in a war." Lippestad hasn't asked why Breivik picked him as a lawyer, and that he [Lippestad] was "in shock" to receive the call.
12.04 Is he a warm person, or a cold person? "My point of view is that he is a very cold person." Is he psychotic? "I don't know."
12.03 Is it possible to get a fair trial, to find a jury of Norwegians who are not influenced? "No-one is not influenced, but it is my job to make sure the trial is fair", says Lippestad.
12.02 Lippestad says his client should be in hospital, not in prison. "It will be a long court case", he says, talking about how the insanity defence will go; it will take time to prove his client is insane. "The legal process is very important", he says.
11.59 Interesting: Lippestad is a member of the Labour Party. He says that as far as he knows Breivik does not know that.
11.58 "If he doesn't want to follow my advice he can get a new lawyer", says Lippestad, who says that he will be offering an insanity defence. Breivik took drugs before his attack on Friday, he says, to stay strong and awake.
11.57 Lippestad won't comment on whether he has received death threats since taking the case, saying that Norwegians are very "loving" people who believe in democracy.
11.56 "This whole case indicates that he is insane", says Lippestad, asked whether Breivik has done anything in prison that would suggest he is insane. "He believes he is in a war, that nobody understands him, but that in 60 years we will all understand him."
11.55 The main court hearing is normally public, but it is too early to say whether that will be the case here, says Lippestad.
11.54 "I can't describe him, he's not like anyone else", says Lippestad, when asked what Breivik is like and whether he is polite. He says it's too early to say what his defence will be.
11.52 Lippestad doesn't know if Breivik is a suicide watch, and says it is a medical question whether he is a suicide risk. His family have not asked to see him and he has seen no-one.
11.51 "He believes he is in a war", says Lippestad, explaining why he has admitted to carrying out the atrocities but still pleaded not guilty, "and in war you can do these things".
11.48 "It's too early to say anything about the case", says Geir Lippestad, asked about witnesses. He says that he was disappointed that yesterday's court hearing was closed.
Asked why Breivik looked tired, he says "He's exhausted. He's in a very special situation." He is being questioned, he goes on, but only in normal daylight hours. He is co-operating with police.
"He has a view on reality which is very rare", he says. He expected to be tortured by Norwegian police as a result of that view. He told the lawyer that he acted alone, but that there are other cells - so no-one from those cells helped him with this attack, if indeed they exist. Lippestad doesn't know where the police uniform came from, or where the other purported cells are.
11.44 Breivik's lawyer has said that his client expected to be killed on Friday, according to Channel 4's Carl Dinnen.
11.39 Henning Mankell, the author of Wallander, writes in The Guardian that Breivik's actions mark "a ghastly return of Übermensch mentality that was the mark of Hitler's Nazism", but warns Norway against a draconian response:
It may be impossible to completely defend oneself and one's country against these actions, but we must try. We must defend the open society, because if we start locking our doors, if we let fear decide, the person who committed the act of terror will win. He will have injected fear into our community. As Franklin D Roosevelt put it: "The only thing we have to fear is fear itself."
11.20 "The long process of identifying Anders Behring Breivik's victims begins", writes Raf Sanchez, who has provided a list of the names known so far.
(Clockwise from top left) Hanne Kristine Fridtun, Tore Eikeland, Hanne Lovile and Rafal Yasin
11.12 The areas of Oslo that were closed after the bomb have now been reopened, according to Markus Karlsson, a Norwegian and the business editor of France24.com. People are walking around, inspecting the damage, he says. Meanwhile Michelle Shephard of the Toronto Star tweets that the scene outside the Oslo cathedral is "amazing to see: a street of flowers that just keeps coming".
11.00 Geert Wilders, the anti-Islamic Dutch politician, has also made a statement about Breivik. He says:
The manifesto makes it clear that the perpetrator is a madman. That the fight against Islam is violently abused by a psychopath is disgusting, a slap in the face of the global anti-Islamic movement. It fills me with disgust that the perpetrator refers to me and [Wilders's political party] the Freedom Party [PVV] in his manifesto. Neither PVV nor I are responsible for a lone idiot who twists and violently abuses the freedom-loving anti-Islamisation ideals. We are democrats at heart. The Freedom Party has never called for violence and never will do.
This post has been edited by Le Roi on 26 Jul 2011, 16:00
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