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Witnesses recall killer's ruse to get to Utøya

AFP
AFP - [email protected]
Witnesses recall killer's ruse to get to Utøya

A guard and a ferry captain told an Oslo court Thursday how a uniform-clad Anders Behring Breivik had tricked them last July 22nd into allowing him to go to Utøya island, where he massacred 69 people.

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"You have a certain level of authority when you arrive in a police uniform," Simen Braeden Mortensen told the Oslo district court on the 11th day of the gunman's trial.

In charge of checking out anyone wanting to go to Utøya, where the ruling Labour Party's youth wing was hosting a summer camp, the young guard recalled how Breivik explained he had been sent as a routine precaution after Oslo's government district was hit by a bomb earlier the same day.

In fact, Breivik himself had set off that bomb, killing eight people.

Braeden Mortensen acknowledged he had been surprised to see the fake officer get out of a grey Fiat van rather than a police vehicle, but had been reassured to see his forged identity card from Norway's PST intelligence agency, which the right-wing extremist was carrying around his neck.

"I thought it was a legitimate police ID," the guard said, as the stony-faced confessed killer, 33, looked on.

After making it past the first control, Breivik was allowed to board the MS Thorbjørn ferry, which had been docked at Utøya after the Oslo attack but had been sent especially to pick up the fake police officer.

Ferry captain Jon Olsen explained in his highly anticipated testimony that he had helped the killer carry a crate which turned out to be full of ammunition.

He also described how he fled with the ferry when Breivik fired his first shots, as his companion, who was the second person shot, lay dead on the ground and his daughter was still stuck on the island.

"I spend most of my time asking myself if I could have acted differently. Each time, I reach the conclusions that I did the right thing," Olsen said.

He explained that the gunman in disguise did not act suspiciously.

"The uniform and all the rest made it look like everything was in order," he said.

But just after unloading the heavy crate that Breivik said was filled with explosive-detection equipment, Olsen saw him shoot and kill his first victim, the camp guard and off-duty police officer Trond Berntsen.

To this day, the ferry captain has trouble remembering if he, seconds later, saw Breivik turn his gun on his companion Monica Bøsei, the camp adminstrator who was considered the island "matriarch".

"I thought it was a training drill, but then on the other hand, I thought that I would have been informed," Olsen told the court.

In panic, he fled on foot, but after a long detour managed to get back to the MS Thorbjørn and took off with several other people who had sought refuge onboard.

"I had to get the boat far from there," out of reach of Breivik's bullets, he explained.

"It was totally quiet. I thought that the sky would soon be filled with helicopters, that the fjord would be covered with boats and flashing lights, but no, nothing," he said.

Breivik spent more than an hour striding around the small island, executing most of his mainly teenaged victims with shots to the head, before he was finally arrested.

After receiving word that his daughter was alive, Olsen contributed to the rescue operation on the island, and helped shuttle injured and dead to the mainland.

While Breivik has confessed to carrying out the twin attacks, he refuses to plead guilty, insisting his attacks were "cruel but necessary" to stop the Labour Party's "multicultural experiment" and the "Muslim invasion" of Norway and Europe.

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