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Anders Breivik: Norway did not violate mass killer's human rights, rules appeals court | Anders Breivik: Norway did not violate mass killer's human rights, rules appeals court |
(35 minutes later) | |
Norway did not violate mass killer Anders Breivik's human rights, an appeal court has ruled. | Norway did not violate mass killer Anders Breivik's human rights, an appeal court has ruled. |
Breivik charged he had been abused for being placed in near-isolation in a three-room cell since he was jailed for massacring 77 people in 2011. | |
The Borgarting appeals court overturned a 2016 verdict by a lower Oslo court that his isolation amounted to "inhuman and degrading treatment" under the European Convention on Human Rights. | The Borgarting appeals court overturned a 2016 verdict by a lower Oslo court that his isolation amounted to "inhuman and degrading treatment" under the European Convention on Human Rights. |
"The Borgarting Court of Appeal has determined that Anders Behring Breivik is not, and has not been subjected to torture or inhuman or degrading treatment," the court said in a statement. | |
Strict conditions for Breivik, who has no contact with other inmates, were justified because he was unrepentant and posed a threat of violence, it said. Also, other prisoners might attack him. | |
A lower Oslo court had ruled in 2016 that such conditions were inhuman treatment under the European Convention on Human Rights. | |
Breivik's lawyer Oeystein Storrvik expressed surprise at the verdict and said he would appeal to Norway's Supreme Court. If that fails, Breivik can appeal to the European Court of Human Rights. | |
On 22 July, 2011, Breivik set off a bomb in Oslo's government district before carrying out a mass shooting at the annual summer camp of the left-wing Labour Party's youth organisation. | |
Eight people were killed in the explosion and 69 more died on Utoya island after he masqueraded as a police officer carrying out security checks. | |
The majority of his victims were children and teenagers as young as 14, with survivors describing how Breivik roamed the island for almost an hour picking off those trying to escape. | |
He has previously described himself as a fascist and wrote a manifesto citing Islam, feminism and "cultural Marxism" as his enemies. |