At least 100 extremists support Breivik says EDL-linked group

At least a hundred right-wing extremists support Anders Behring Breivik’s brutal terror attacks last July, the leader of the English Defence League’s Norwegian sister organisation told an Oslo court on Tuesday.

“I know there are many out there who share Breivik’s views and support his actions,” Ronny Alte, the former leader of the Norwegian Defence League, said. “Perhaps a hundred that I know of.”

Mr Alte’s claim will increase fears among Europe’s security services of copycat attacks inspired by Breivik’s bomb blast and gun massacre last July, and its accompanying manifesto.

It will also help the killer’s lawyers make the case that their client’s militant anti-Islamic ideology is shared by others, and does not reflect a delusional grasp of reality.

Mr Alte stressed that the vast majority of members of both the Norwegian and English Defence Leagues rejected violent terrorist acts such as that carried out by Breivik.

“The vast majority is opposed to his actions. However, some support the manifesto, some support the bomb in the Oslo ministries, while others support the attack.”

r Alte’s testimony, Breivik told the court of a series of childhood experiences which he said had shaped his attitudes towards Muslims.

When he was seven, a Turkish friend’s father allegedly wrecked his bicycle because he had offended him. When he was 15, he was slapped by a Pakistani underground driver for riding outside the carriage. Later, in 1995, he was “threatened” by a Kovovo-Albanian youth.

“Taken separately, all these episodes are not so serious,” he admitted. But he said that together they had led to concern about the level of Muslim immigration into Norway.

Breivik’s closest friends told the court last month that they had no recollection of any of the radicalising encounters with Muslims Breivik had described in the manifesto he sent out on the day of his attack.

Breivik has confessed to killing eight people by detonating a bomb in the government quarters in Moscow, and then killing 69 more in a shooting rampage at a youth camp on the Island of Utoya.

But he claims that the attacks were “necessary” to alert Norway to the threat caused my Islamic immigration.

The court announced today that the final verdict in the case, previously expected to be given just before the anniversary of the attacks on July 20, might now be delayed until August 24.

Daily Telegraph


Some 40,000 Norwegians gather to sing song Anders Behring Breivik hates

OSLO – Up to 40,000 Norwegians gathered in Oslo on Thursday to sing a popular peace song derided by Anders Behring Breivik, the gunman on trial for the murder of 77 people, a protest organizers said showed he had not broken their tolerant society.

“It’s we who win,” said guitar-strumming folk singer Lillebjoern Nilsen as he led the singing and watched the crowd sway gently in the rain. Many held roses above their heads, and some wept.

The musical protest came on the same day that survivors of Breivik’s two attacks last July began to give harrowing testimony at his trial, including a young woman nicknamed ‘miracle girl’ who described how she had survived his bombing of government offices in central Oslo against all the odds.

The crowd chose a song – “Children of the Rainbow” – that extols the type of multicultural society Breivik has said he despised and one that he specifically dismissed during the trial as Marxist propaganda.

He has often used chillingly graphic language to describe his killing spree, but it seems to have taken his comments over the song to touch a nerve in a country that prides itself on a tradition of tolerance and justice.

The protest follows several days of defiant testimony from Breivik who has admitted he killed his victims in a blood-soaked attack on Norway’s multicultural society, but denied criminal guilt, saying he did so in defence of Norwegian ethnic purity.

“I care about the people who died and whose family members died. This march is about them and about our Norway, not his (Breivik’s) Norway,” said Peter Solberg, a 46-year-old office worker.

As it rained gently, people then marched several blocks to the district courthouse where Breivik is on trial, close to the site where he set off a bomb that killed eight people on July 22.

Most left their roses, a symbol of the ruling Labour Party, on the security fence around the courthouse in a gesture reminiscent of a “rose march” through Oslo just days after the attack.

Thousands more Norwegians held similar musical demonstrations in towns across the country.
As the sound of singing filled the streets, survivors lined up in the courtroom to take the witness stand and describe their experience of the bombing.

“I was spitting teeth,” said Harald Foesker, who had been at work in the Ministry of Justice when the 950-kilogram fertilizer bomb went off outside his window.

“I felt at once that this was a terror attack on the government building . . . I called for help but nobody answered.”

He said he had lost 80 per cent of his vision and that his face had to be restored afterwards, adding he was proud to live in a country that treated criminal defendants with dignity.

Breivik, 33, has called his victims “traitors” who deserved death for embracing left-wing values which, in his view, opened Europe to a slow-motion Muslim invasion.

He has said he felt he had no choice but to strike back, bombing government offices in an attack that killed eight people and staging a brutal gun massacre at a Labour Party island summer camp that killed 69 people.

Inside the specially constructed courtroom, 24-year-old Anne Helene Lund said she had been working at the government building’s reception desk when Breivik parked a big white van outside and lit a seven-minute bomb fuse.

“She was labelled ‘miracle girl’ because the doctors said it was almost impossible to survive something like this,” said her father, Jan Henrik Lund.

In addition to head and brain injuries, her legs and thighs were crushed; she was cut all over and still has glass shards stuck in her body. Some audience members wept and prosecutor Inga Bejer Engh’s eyes reddened during the testimony.

“The head injury I got caused me to fall into a coma, and as a consequence I don’t remember anything from that day, and very little from 2011,” said Lund, adding that she uses makeup to cover facial scars and still has trouble reading.

After Lund said she had been forced to move back into her parents’ home, she lightened the mood, adding that this “was not the most terrible part” of what she had been through.

Breivik, seated perhaps four metres (13 feet) away, smiled along with everyone else.

Leader – Post


South Shields extremist Kenny Holden is held over bomb threat

A FAR-RIGHT extremist has been arrested on Tyneside over allegations he accessed a social network site to threaten an “Oslo-style” bomb attack on Muslims.

A 29-year-old from South Shields, named on internet websites yesterday as Kenny Holden, was arrested by officers on Saturday after race-hate posts were allegedly made on Facebook.

Web pages linked to the English Defence League claim detectives discovered comments threatening a pipe bomb attack on the town’s Ocean Road, inspired by the Norwegian mass murderer Anders Behring Breivik. Right-wing extremist Breivik is currently on trial over the deaths of 77 people, eight in an Oslo bombing and 69 shot dead on Utoya Island.

Last night Chief Insp Michael Barton, of South Tyneside Area Command, confirmed that Northumbria Police had launched an investigation and said they would not tolerate “racial incitement” on the internet.

He said: “Extensive inquiries are being carried out. There is no place for any sort of racial incitement or use of social networking to place inappropriate comments and we take incidents such as this extremely seriously.

“I’d like to reassure the public that a full investigation is taking place into this allegation.”

Holden – who is believed to be a member of the EDL’s South Shields division – was arrested on suspicion of assault and possessing racially inflammatory material on Saturday before he was bailed pending further inquiries.

A police spokesman said the arrest for assault relates to a domestic incident and is unrelated to the alleged racial offence.

The spokesman added: “Extensive inquiries have been carried out and there is no apparent threat to the general public.”

The arrest comes just days after an anti-terror operation was carried out over the posting of alleged racist postings online.

Officers from the North East Counter Terrorism Unit carried out synchronised raids at 7.45am on Thursday at houses in North Tyneside and County Durham.

They took 43-year-old Darren Yateley, of Backworth, North Tyneside, and 46-year-old Paul Duffy, from Elgin Avenue, Seaham, County Durham, to local police stations for questioning.

Yateley – along with all the others – has been released on police bail pending further inquires.

Police refused to say what had been posted online but said it related to posts on social network sites that could provoke racial hatred.

The arrests were part of nationwide raids which involved police strikes from the North East to London.

The suspects are being linked with a splinter group of the English Defence League known as the North West Infidels. Searches were made at each of the houses and police recovered a range of items including computers, laptops and mobile phones.

Journal Live


What they really think


Peter King is one of those “troubled” racists.

In and out of the BNP and prison, he’s made a bit of a name for himself in the North East for allegedly beating up anyone that comes near his ex-partner. In between prison, he used to organise for the BNP while his partner was the North East Organiser.

He even travelled down to London a couple of years ago while BNP chief Nick Griffin was defiling the cenotaph, to attack former BNP golden boy Kieran Trent who was hiding around the corner.

Still, that has not stopped perpetual bore and BNP press officer Simon Darby recently posting up pics of King on his blog like he is some kind of wholesome individual.

One of King’s current heroes is the Norwegian Terrorist Anders Behring Breivik who is currently on trial for the murder of 77 innocent Norwegians. King and Breivik were even Facebook friends.

Tonight, King’s been watching a documentary about Breivik on the BBC2. He and others of his ilk are stumped in their living rooms re-living the good old days and chatting on Facebook together. “Shame wasn’t here in Bradford” wrote King, referring to what Breivik did on the Island of Utoya.

This is of course what the BNP and their ilk really think.

They are all sick, not just King.


Matthew Collins – Hope not Hate