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Anders Behring Breivik Trial: Norway Killer Trial Interrupted By Unruly Spectator

By JULIA GRONNEVET 05/11/12 11:43 AM ET AP

OSLO, Norway — An Iraqi man whose brother was killed in Norway's worst peacetime massacre hurled a shoe at the confessed killer and urged him to "go to hell" in a rare outburst Friday that briefly interrupted the terror trial of Anders Behring Breivik.

The incident was the first display of anger inside the normally subdued court room where the far-right fanatic is being tried for the bomb-and-shooting attacks that left 77 people dead on July 22.

Hayder Mustafa Qasim, 20, traveled to Norway from Baghdad this week to attend the proceedings against Breivik in Oslo's district court, his lawyer, Kari Nessa Nordtun, told The Associated Press.

His brother Karar Mustafa Qasim, a 19-year-old who had moved to Norway as an asylum-seeker, was among the victims of Breivik's shooting rampage at a youth camp, Nordtun said.

"I took off my shoe, got up, shouted at the killer, got eye contact with him and threw the shoe," Qasim was quoted as saying by the Norwegian newspaper Aftenposten.

"He was alone in Norway, without family," Qasim said of his brother. "The killer took his life. And he ruined the life for me and the family. I have traveled from Iraq to Norway to be in court. And it has made an enormous impression on me."

Throwing of shoes to insult someone has long been a form of protest in many countries, but the practice gained widespread attention when an Iraqi threw his shoes at then-U.S. President George W. Bush at a televised news conference in Baghdad in 2008 during the Iraq war.

Witnesses said forensic experts were going through autopsy reports for some of the victims when a man in the second row suddenly stood up and threw a shoe at a desk where Breivik and his defense lawyers were seated.

"He shouted, 'You killer, go to hell.' And repeated it several times" in English, said Mikaela Akerman, a Swedish journalist who was in the court room.

The shoe hit one of Breivik's defense lawyers but she was not hurt.

Breivik remained calm and "smiled a little" as he watched security guards apprehend the man and take him out of the court room, Akerman told The Associated Press.

"He keeps shouting and is crying heavily as he's being led out," Akerman said. "Some of the spectators clapped their hands. Some yelled 'Bravo.' Many others started crying."

Breivik addressed the court as proceedings resumed after a 10-minute break. "If someone wants to throw something at me, you can do it when I walk in or when I leave, thank you," he said, according to Akerman.

Police operations leader Rune Bjoersvik said the man was a brother of one of the victims, but didn't name him. Bjoersvik downplayed the outburst, calling it a "spontaneous and emotional reaction" that didn't pose a "serious security risk."

The man was emotionally distressed and was taken away from the court in an ambulance, he said.

Qasim's lawyer said the outburst was unplanned. He had listened quietly to his brother's autopsy report on Thursday, but after hearing several more on Friday he couldn't hold back his emotions, Nordtun said.

"It was a sudden reaction," she told AP. "There was such a stifling atmosphere in the court. Afterward people clapped. The tension that was in the room was released."

The incident offered a sharp break with the polite atmosphere that has reigned inside the courtroom, even as Breivik testified in graphic detail on how he set off a car bomb that killed eight people in Oslo's government district and then hunted down teenagers at the governing Labor Party's annual youth camp on Utoya island. More than half of the 69 people killed on Utoya were teenagers.

Breivik has admitted to the attacks but pleaded innocent to terror charges, saying the victims were traitors for embracing multiculturalism. He claims to represent a European network of modern-day crusaders opposed to Muslim immigration, but prosecutors say group does not exist.

His mental state is the key issue to be resolved during the trial. If found guilty and criminally sane, he would face 21 years in prison, though he could be held longer if deemed dangerous to society. If declared insane, he would be committed to compulsory psychiatric care.

Police didn't say how the shoe-throwing incident would affect their security procedures at the court but as the trial resumed later Friday, three security guards were placed at the front of the gallery.

Frode Elgesem, a lawyer for the bereaved, said he didn't consider the incident a violent attack.

"I experienced this outburst as a desperate expression of despair," he told Norway's NTB news agency.

The defense lawyer who was hit by the shoe, Vibeke Hein Baere, told national broadcaster NRK she hoped the incident would not be repeated during the trial, which is scheduled to end in late June.

"There are many weeks left and I hope and believe that we will return to the dignified manners we have seen up until now," she said.

___

Associated Press writer Karl Ritter in Stockholm contributed to this report.

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Anders Behring Breivik, a right-wing extremist who confessed to a bombing and mass shooting that killed 77 people on July 22, 2011, arrives for a detention hearing at a court in Oslo, Norway, Monday, Feb. 6, 2012. (AP Photo/Heiko Junge, Scanpix Norway)

Breivik is charged with terrorism and premeditated murder for a bombing in Oslo's government district, killing eight, and a shooting attack at a political youth camp, killing 69. He admits to the attacks but rejects criminal guilt. If convicted he would face a maximum sentence of 21 years in prison, though sentences can be extended if a criminal is considered a menace to society. If declared insane by the court, he would be committed to psychiatric care. Both sides can appeal the ruling to a higher court.

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OSLO, Norway — An Iraqi man whose brother was killed in Norway's worst peacetime massacre hurled a shoe at the confessed killer and urged him to "go to hell" in a rare outburst Friday that brief...
OSLO, Norway — An Iraqi man whose brother was killed in Norway's worst peacetime massacre hurled a shoe at the confessed killer and urged him to "go to hell" in a rare outburst Friday that brief...
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04:58 AM on 05/14/2012
You gays do not let justice to take it's corse, you acclaim and uplift someone that just committed a crime in the court of justice, I command the gay who throw the shoe to be in jail for 6 years, no body rebels in a Court, OK.

Do this in Judge Judy's Court, lets see what happen.
09:18 AM on 05/13/2012
What the hell is wrong with Norway? Twenty-one years for murdering 77 people? That's about three months imprisonment for each murder.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mudshark12
Now who are you jiving with that cosmik debris?
02:45 PM on 05/12/2012
I stated in my OPINION that Norway should make an exception to their ban on the death penalty for Brevik and suggested that he drawn and quartered or burned at the stake because of the cruelty he inflicted on his victims.

In response, west lothian questioner, said to me: "So why then would you wish or expect them to change one of the things that makes their country one of the happiest and most civilised on the planet? To emulate America? I think, if you asked Norwegians about that they would pretty much unanimously answer in the negative... once they stopped laughing at the total ridiculousness of the suggestion."

Now I wish to submit: is my suggestion THAT ridiculous? Do you think that Norway's citizens don't feel anger toward Anders for killing 77 of them? Possibly want revenge for the brutal and cold blooded murder of innocent children? Is warehousing this creep for the rest of his life enough of a punishment for what he did?
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03:15 PM on 05/12/2012
Perhaps you weren't following this story from its horrific beginning. In the immediate aftermath following the horrors of Oslo and Utoya the Norwegian government, politicians of all parties, people in the streets and, perhaps most poignantly of all, bereaved families and survivors of Breivik's rampage were united in their desire to have their nation's laws and social norms upheld. They do not want the death sentence in their land.

On the basis of your apparent ignorance of these things, then perhaps your statement is not quite so ridiculous. Having now been informed of these things, all of which are verifiable through multpile sources, you may wish to modify your initial statement. If you stick to it though, then it is indeed that ridiculous at the very least, and probably more so. Revenge is not a dish best eaten cold. It is a dish that should be sent back to the kitchen.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mudshark12
Now who are you jiving with that cosmik debris?
04:52 PM on 05/12/2012
I'm not from Norway and was unaware of this. I might consider moving there they are very noble people. My bad.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
SirenForSanity
The trouble vine keeps growing.
06:11 PM on 05/12/2012
Many of us watching with great interest the display of stoicism and rationality of the Norwegians. Granted, it is an alien response for many, it is a objecitve for those of us who desire peace.
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Boduognat
Lasciate ogne speranza, voi ch'entrate.
06:41 PM on 05/12/2012
"...I stated in my OPINION that Norway should make an exception to their ban on the death penalty for Brevik..."

I disagree...

By putting the man on trial, by reinforcing their core values, by allowing him his day in court, they do not really put the man, or the individual on trial, rather than the ideology of hate of which he is a representative, or a face.

You can not really beat that ideology by executing a single face of it, but by the way the Norwegians are conducting this trial, I believe they are demonstrating the villainnes of the ideology behind Mr. Breivik, as well as their determination to make sure they will not tolerate this ideology to gain ground in their society.

Meanwhile, for those that still doubt it, it is my personal belief that Islam has a lot of problems it should deal with, but the present demographic and sociologic reality is that Islam has become a part of most European countries. That is something we can like or dislike, but it is a fact and we will have to deal with it, in spite of the American Strategy of total extermination of Muslims worldwide.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mudshark12
Now who are you jiving with that cosmik debris?
07:22 PM on 05/12/2012
You were doing fine and winning me over until you said "....in spite of the American Strategy of total extermination of Muslims worldwide."

Here in the states, the governments hands are tied when it comes to religious persecution. They have to be politically correct and they walk on egg shells when Muslims are concerned.

Anyway I could see your point as the Norwegians are letting Anders have enough rope so he will "hang himself" in the court of public opinion by their willing demonstration of the villainies Mr. Breivik's ideology.

I do admire their determination to make sure that his ideology won't gain any more ground in their society.

Very well, then give him bread and water along with solitary confinement for the rest of his natural life!
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08:54 AM on 05/13/2012
You really hit the nail on the head with this point:

"By putting the man on trial, by reinforcing their core values, by allowing him his day in court, they do not really put the man, or the individual on trial, rather than the ideology of hate of which he is a representative, or a face"
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Norge
Rolf K. Artist, worker of metal, writer of poems
01:46 PM on 05/12/2012
Breviks' greatest fear is the lose of his credibility. With a psy. verdict he would lose his political, position it being reduced to meaningless nonsense. Which is actually what much of it is. His so called manefesto is a configuation of leem and paste paragraphs lifted from other references and most of the manifesto is not his own thinking and formulation.
He has a hero complex, martardom complex, dilusions of grandur complex and perhaps a jesus complex.
He sees himself as a saviour.
12:14 PM on 05/12/2012
I sympathize with the shoe-thrower.
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03:20 PM on 05/12/2012
As, I am sure, so many others. I also have to applaud his restraint. How easy would it have been for the man to try forcing his way past the barrier of security people and launch a more forceful attack? Instead, the man kept his cool and delivered what his (the shoe thrower) culture holds as a deep personal insult. Insults like that last longer in the memory of the insulted person than a death sentence would linger in the memory of the executed. Bravo Sir!
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02:50 AM on 05/12/2012
As a liberal and one who finds too many laws put too many in jail,
I still think we need to get rid of those who simply can not
be reformed and are extremely dangerous....and
lastly guilty of massive crimes. For creatures
like this guy our means are too humane.
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09:35 AM on 05/12/2012
I'm sorry, cincinatti, but you really cannot begin your comment with:

"As a liberal..."
and conclude with:
"...for creatures like this guy.our means are too humane".
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02:57 PM on 05/12/2012
Oh I disagree !

Being liberal and open minded does not mean some are simply evil,
incapable of reform, and have done such things that deserve the
ultimate penalty. While I hate violence of any sort sometimes
you have to treat some souls as beyond saving, and send them
to the next 'world.'
Or if confronted with such a person in a deadly match,
would you not pull the trigger ?
I'd try to talk first, etc. but in the end some like
Manson or this guy are simply "inhuman."
12:57 AM on 05/12/2012
I can't even begin to comprehend the agony the families of the deceased must be feeling when they see Breivik smirking in court. What a psycho! I don't believe in capital punishment, but hopefully he feels the full brunt of the law, and ends up in a mental ward for the rest of his days. I'm not even sure why the debate of his sanity exists. Is it possible to be sane, commit such cold blooded crimes?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
evolvedtg
A lie's a lie, even if everyone believes it.
12:54 AM on 05/12/2012
Right wingers do this stuff because they truly believe that their behavior is sanctioned by a higher power. Trying to reason with a person who has ceased to think rationally is like giving a dead person medicine.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
IfIonlyknew
Go ahead....Say something funny.
12:51 AM on 05/12/2012
That is two people I now know have had shoes thrown at them with hate......But only one is able to stand and admit that what he has done,He did on purpose.
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White Diamond
I've been things and seen places
11:01 PM on 05/11/2012
The whole "throwing the shoe" tirade is so unmanly. Might as well go get a frying pan and hide behind the door.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
evolvedtg
A lie's a lie, even if everyone believes it.
12:56 AM on 05/12/2012
That's the islam shoe thing. To them it's a HUGE insult. It just makes us shake our heads and roll our eyes. Funny. (Truth be told, I'd rather get hit with a shoe than your frying pan...)
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Stoopid American
Trooth, justice, and the American way ...
02:18 AM on 05/12/2012
Please tell me how raising one's middle finger is any less silly? Your cultural bias is showing ....
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Mark Helfgott
10:09 PM on 05/11/2012
I'm pretty sure that's where the guy is going.
08:55 PM on 05/11/2012
It's moment like these that I am proud to be an American, this guy would have definately faced the ''ultimate justice'' here, and none of this 20 years
10:29 PM on 05/11/2012
There's a clause in the Norwegian criminal code which allows for people to be held indefinately. I don't know the exact wording but in all likelihood Breivik will be among those held under the clause.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
hotheaded
10:52 PM on 05/11/2012
You mean like Casey Anthony did? I'm not sure how proud you feel about that.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
evolvedtg
A lie's a lie, even if everyone believes it.
12:57 AM on 05/12/2012
One bossy teacher on the jury puts it all out the window.
08:28 PM on 05/11/2012
only 21 years?
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GOODDOC1
"civil war" is an oxymoron
10:23 PM on 05/11/2012
It can be extended if he's still considered a "menance to society".
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jstrate
08:14 PM on 05/11/2012
From what little I've read it looks like he's got bipolar disorder--accompanied by delusions of grandeur and all that stuff. Lithium or depakote might help. It's no justification for what he did. He'll be locked up for a long time. The grief of the victims' families and friends may fade but will never go away.
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ColoradoCool
Proud Liberal, Graduate Degree, Mother, Grandmothe
11:22 PM on 05/11/2012
If he's bipolar, then he's going to crash from his manic phase and burn. We'll see a whole new Breivik when that happens.
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Stoopid American
Trooth, justice, and the American way ...
02:19 AM on 05/12/2012
Let's hope it is soon. I would not mind to see this guy experiencing some real misery.
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kmeccat
life is just a series of adaptations
07:47 PM on 05/11/2012
He's obviously enjoying every minute of this trial.
It would have been better to immediately declare him insane and lock him away in an insane asylum for the rest of his life, then to allow him weeks of free publicity for his evil, paranoid fantasies.