Remembering Norway’s 2011 Terror Attacks and Their Lingering Lessons (KOR)
12 Articles
12 Articles
On July 22, 2011, Anders Behring Breivik's two-part terrorist attack in Norway killed 77 people. The tragedy shocked Europe and changed the Scandinavian country forever.
Five of the ministers in the current government are survivors of the terrorist attack on Utøya 14 years ago. That is a victory.
Støre on Utøya: – The hate is not gone – What we thought could never happen again, can happen again. The hate is not gone. Extremism is not gone, said Støre in his speech at the memorial service on Utøya on Tuesday. Survivors and survivors gathered in the sun on Utøya to remember those who were killed. – It is also good to come together. It is nice to be here. AUF has rebuilt this island – not as a monument, but as a vibrant place for democracy…
The anniversary was commemorated at a memorial in Oslo to those who died, a glass wall with the names of the dead. Jonas Gahr Støre, the Prime Minister of Norway, and the chairman of the Norwegian Labour Party's youth movement, spoke at the event, where the gunman shot dead 69 people at their summer gathering on Útey. The names of the 77 people who were killed that day, both in Oslo and Útey, were then read out. The day that changed everything A…
The terrorist attack in Norway has left deep scars on the country. The tragedy, which has been going on for 14 years, is a warning about the extent to which political radicalization can lead.
He swam for his life. Tim Viskjer survived Utøya. He hopes it is possible to break the attitudes that led to the disaster.
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