iPhone app iPad app Android phone app Android tablet app More

Anders Behring Breivik Trial: Norway Killer Gloats In Court, Norwegians Shows No Anger

By KARL RITTER 04/22/12 12:00 PM ET AP

OSLO, Norway — You would have forgiven Norwegians for showing more outrage against confessed mass killer Anders Behring Breivik.

When he walks in to court flashing a right-wing salute. When he testifies effortlessly about killing their children, brothers and sisters as if they were flies. When he calls his teenage victims traitors who deserved to die for their political views.

The subdued atmosphere during the trial of a right-wing fanatic who confessed to slaughtering 77 people on July 22 reflects Norway's almost self-punishing efforts to avoid feelings of vengeance against the unrepentant gunman.

"This is the Norwegian way," said Trond Henry Blattmann, whose 17-year-old son was among the 69 people killed in Breivik's shooting massacre on Utoya island. "We need to carry this out in a dignified manner. If people were shouting and screaming this would be a circus and not a trial. We don't want it to be a circus."

Like other Scandinavians, Norwegians are not prone to express their emotions out loud. But the good behavior of the crowd inside courtroom 250 has surprised even some local observers.

Thomas Hylland Eriksen, a professor of social anthropology at Oslo University, said that by treating the trial with "respect and decency," Norwegians are showing defiance against Breivik by standing up for values at the core of their national identity.

When he called Breivik "pudgy" in Norwegian media before the trial, Eriksen said some people took offense.

"I received mail from people who said 'you shouldn't say that about his appearance. He has a mother. We have to treat him with respect.'"

Breivik has admitted setting off a car bomb outside the government headquarters, killing eight, before unleashing a shooting massacre at the governing Labor Party's youth camp on Utoya.

But he denies criminal guilt and rejects the authority of the court, saying it is a vehicle of a "multiculturalist" conspiracy to destroy Norway.

His testimony, which is set to end Monday, has been horrific. A hushed courtroom heard his macabre account of point-blank executions of shell-shocked youth on Utoya. The bereaved embraced and sobbed, but they let him finish, holding back the urge to scream out in agony.

"I think everybody has that urge. Even his lawyers have that urge. But will that help us?" asked Blattmann. "It would just give the terrorist more publicity."

The "dignity" of the process has won praise in Norwegian media. But between breaks there is sometimes discussions in the corridors about whether Breivik deserves it.

"It puzzles me a little bit," said Thomas Indreboe, a citizen judge who was dismissed from the case for an online comment that Breivik should get the death penalty, which is not applied in Europe, except for in Belarus.

"When you look at other countries, people shout and scream," he told The Associated Press.

Indreboe said he "didn't quite understand" why Breivik got to start his defense by reading an hour-long statement about his extremist political views. And he stands by his opinion that Breivik deserves to be put to death.

"Because what he did is so serious and horrible. There is no other justice," Indreboe told the AP.

Most people here say it's important that Breivik – like anybody accused of a crime – gets a chance to explain himself in an open court, despite the scale of the attacks.

That approach contrasts with how the U.S. has dealt with the five Guantanamo Bay prisoners charged in the Sept. 11 attacks.

President Barack Obama wanted to close the Guantanamo prison and try the men in civilian court but was rebuffed by Congress, and the administration moved the case back to the military's war crimes tribunal at Guantanamo.

"I think it's being handled in a good way," Jannike Berger, a 25-year-old Oslo teacher said of the Breivik trial. "I think it's important that it is as open as it is ... and it is important that he gets to explain himself."

To some foreign observers, Norway's desire to do right has gone overboard, allowing the confessed mass killer just what he wants: a platform to promote his extreme political ideology. Print media can cover all parts of the trial. Norwegian TV broadcasts much of it live, including when he enters court, but isn't allowed to show his testimony.

In Germany, particularly sensitive to right-wing extremism, the Sueddeutsche Zeitung criticized how the "the murderer is smiling, grinning gloatingly, clenching his fist" before a world audience.

"The murderer had the center stage, as if the court's most pressing matter were how he stages himself," the newspaper said in an editorial.

Others applauded the way Norway has handled the case.

"Norway announced last year that it would respond to the attacks with more openness and democracy and, amazingly, has lived up to that pledge," Dutch daily De Volkskrant said. "The trial is a demonstration of the strength of democracy against a violent loner who is so weak he feels the need to take up arms."

Breivik, himself, ridiculed Norway's maximum prison sentence of 21 years, saying the only proper outcomes of the case would be death or acquittal.

If found sane – a key issue in the case – he would face 21 years in prison though he can be held longer if deemed a danger to society. If sentenced to psychiatric care, in theory he would be released once he's no longer deemed psychotic and dangerous.

Norwegian legal experts say it's crucial that every part of the proceedings is conducted by the book so that Breivik cannot claim he didn't get a fair trial. Many say it's also important that the gruesome details are documented to make sure that Breivik is kept away from society for a long time, maybe for the rest of his life.

"When Behring Breivik at some point in the future goes to court and demands to be released – whether from a prison or from a psychiatric hospital – the judgment will the be most central document in that evaluation," Inge D. Hanssen, one of Norway's most experienced crime reporters wrote in newspaper Aftenposten.

Following Norwegian custom, the prosecutors and even lawyers for the bereaved shook Breivik's hand on the first day in court. Prosecutors maintain a polite tone, even when Breivik is being evasive or challenges the point of their questions.

The general impression in Norway is that all parties in the case, from the prosecutors to the defense lawyers, are doing a good job.

But Magnus Ranstorp, a terror researcher from the Swedish Defense College, said once they have extracted all the information they want from him, they should increase the pressure.

"He needs to have his world rocked a little bit," Ranstorp said. "It should not go out this way. It should not be softy softy. It should switch to a different mode so that he understands what he did was pure evil."

That's not necessarily how Norway sees it. Outside the Oslo district court, the spirit of facing terror with tolerance that was so strong in Norway after the attacks has returned.

People are attaching roses to the fence surrounding the court, many with messages of support for victims' families and survivors of the massacre.

The closest thing to anger was a short message scribbled on a card decorated with a ribbon in the red-white-and-blue colors of the Norwegian flag. "Apologize, Breivik," it said.

___

Associated Press writers Bjoern H. Amland in Oslo, Juergen Baetz in Berlin, and Mike Corder in The Hague, Netherlands, contributed to this report.

Earlier on HuffPost:

FOLLOW WORLD

OSLO, Norway — You would have forgiven Norwegians for showing more outrage against confessed mass killer Anders Behring Breivik. When he walks in to court flashing a right-wing salute. When he ...
OSLO, Norway — You would have forgiven Norwegians for showing more outrage against confessed mass killer Anders Behring Breivik. When he walks in to court flashing a right-wing salute. When he ...
Filed by Ryan Craggs  | 
 
 
  • Comments
  • 347
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
Page: 1 2 3 4 5  Next ›  Last »  (8 total)
01:35 AM on 04/24/2012
What a refreshing case of balanced-ness in letting people voice their thoughts.

When did we start expunging people's right to say offensive stuff in the United States?

It's forever agree-to-agree-with-me-or-be-muted season in the contiguous 48.

That just shows people fearing that, although offensive, thoughts others have might actually be valid and true.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
snydleyy
04:09 PM on 04/23/2012
I am inspired by how the country of Norway has reacted to this whole nightmare. I don't think that this murderer should have been allowed to grandstand such as he has, but you have to hand it to them for the composure they have shown.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
yelnatsfavorite
10:36 AM on 04/28/2012
Was this story before or after the 40,000 people stood outside the court house and sang a song that he confessed to hating? One about the way people should love all like brothers and sisters. The Norwegian population is so very Christ-like....so different than the "Christians" of the United States.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
offcenterlevi
03:57 PM on 04/23/2012
Our society could learn a lot from this. We seem to steep in a caustic mix of anger, hatred, distrust, and bitterness. Over time this can only eat away at the soul of our nation.
10:49 AM on 04/23/2012
I admire and respect their stance. They are clearly showing this man that he has not in fact, changed who they are: "The trial is a demonstration of the strength of democracy against a violent loner who is so weak he feels the need to take up arms." It must be a living hell for all of them, yet they bravely keep to their beliefs. My respect and sympathies.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Rob Vann
Hope for the best,Plan for the worst,Take what cms
10:40 AM on 04/23/2012
some have said this was Norway's 9/11.. quite a different response.
09:54 AM on 04/23/2012
The only mistake that the cort made was to allow the media to film any portion of the case, not showing the accused on TV would really hurt his feelings, when he is in front of the camera he gloats, without cameras he would just be talking to the room and the publicity he wants would be absent.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
02:56 PM on 04/23/2012
I thought the same. But, Norway has its "uniqueness", drawing from the article by itself:
"The trial is a demonstration of the strength of democracy against a violent loner who is so weak he feels the need to take up arms." I think that's a good experiment in such case for Norway, and the world has to learn from it.
09:54 AM on 04/23/2012
Some, not all, in the USA have a strong taste for revenge. In a case not far from here, four young people 18-20 years old, went to two different teenage parties and got drunk, all four of them quite drunk. They crashed in their car after leaving the second party at 3 AM. Two of them were killed, but the driver and another youth survived. The parents of the dead youngsters wanted a VERY long jail sentence for the driver. The first judge gave him such a sentence, but a panel of judges reduced the sentence. The parents of the dead youngsters are "outraged" at this. I understand their grief, but THEIR children were just as drunk, were just as careless as to go to two drinking parties and to get into a car when they ALL were drunk. Is revenge that "sweet"? Apparently not in Norway, anyway.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
shalebrook
Use your intellect-not your emotion.
09:52 AM on 04/23/2012
Scandinavins cry in private. Then they face the public and deal with it. This is not just the Norwegian way. it is the Swedish and Danish way. It is a regional culture. As a Dane, I have seen this.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
yelnatsfavorite
10:41 AM on 04/28/2012
Danes were given the title "the happiest people on the planet" a few years back....for one: their society is fair and caring. But they also (or so I've been told) are somewhat cynical and always expect the worst so when the good things happen it's a bonus. Not often disappointed.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
MDEvans
Conversation Peace: Boycott Shell, Halt Oil War.
09:31 AM on 04/23/2012
Well...see...no one ever answers this question: if George W. Bush can walk free selling books after applying the First Strike Doctrine (which Barak Obama continues to apply for the same oil, militancy, and drug consortiums) that Breivik is invoking...well, why shouldn't Breivik walk free too? So far it appears he hasn't lied about his intentions like Bush and Obama did and does...shouldn't that also be held in Breivik's favor?
08:59 AM on 04/23/2012
the punishment should fit the crime- in norway 21 yrs -for the murder of 70 plus humans. figureing punishment is hard also, at legislative levels, here in america, where upon crimes by the legislators children, or themselves, they would be subject to the punishment they rule on. if it were only 21 years here we would have alot more crime, because the less creative among us would be saying -' I could do that standing on my head'-
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
AGS1
05:09 AM on 04/23/2012
Congrats to the Norwegians,....but still , a horriffic matter this person caused, and needs to be punished for, ....simple as that, no " softy-softy" about it.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Galician
Keep calm and carry on
04:06 AM on 04/23/2012
The Norwegian people are the best example to follow!We all should learn from them!
03:51 AM on 04/23/2012
Nothing but praise for the Norwegians. I have had to sit through the trial of someone who killed a close friend who laughed and waved at people in the courtroom during the trial before describing her last moments in a way clearly intended to shock and cause pain to her family. It was awful. But letting people like that turn you into a bad person is a victory for them. Stay strong and don't give him that victory.
02:31 AM on 04/23/2012
With the substantial carnage and murder he committed, there is only one final penalty: DEATH
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
07:42 AM on 04/23/2012
You mean: "life" -- don't you?

Norway doesn't have the death penalty.
08:02 AM on 04/23/2012
Unfortunately, he can only be executed once for his 77 crimes.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Susan Shaffer
watching you...
02:07 AM on 04/23/2012
"I received mail from people who said 'you shouldn't say that about his appearance. He has a mother. We have to treat him with respect.'"

I'd like to know what Mother thinks of all this.
photo
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
elizlucinda
a mind is a terrible thing to waste
08:09 AM on 04/23/2012
I suspect his mother...if he has one...is shocked and horrifies by this. No mother raises her child to be a monster......and he has become one. I suspect she feels guilt and shame for the acts of her son...but he is still her son. She must be very lonely
08:59 AM on 04/23/2012
A lot of mothers raise people like this. They run off the father so the boy has no one to teach him to be a man and this is what happens.
05:44 AM on 04/30/2012
She has cut off all contact with him and has not been seen in public since the attacks.

Since there is so little public information, rumors are flying: that she has had a nervous breakdown or a severe depressive episode, for instance. Since she asked to avoid testifying in court for unspecified medical reasons, there might be some truth to this.

His father and sister, who both live abroad, have said that they will probably never return to Norway again.