domenica 24 luglio 2011
AMERICAN FRIENDS YOU NEED TO RESOLVE THIS CRISIS
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/07/25/us/politics/25debt.html?_r=1&ref=politics
about this risk of default, I invite our American friends to do something to bring the budget, positions more 'consistent. do not forget the history that we have behind us, the various crises that have passed, since the Great Depression, World War II, the defeat of Nazism and communism, and with great tenacity on terrorism challenge is being won...THIS IS THE POWER OF THE WEST...I'M SURE YOU CAN WON ALSO THIS CHALLENGE...GOD BLESS YOU....REPUBLICANS AND DEMOCRATS...THIS TIME YOU NEED TO STAY TOGETHER...FOR THE WELL OF THE ENTIRE WEST OF THE WORLD... FOR YOU. AND EUROPEAN ECONOMIES
MYSTERIES OF THE HUMAN PSHICHE
Authorities: Man accused in Norway terror attacks confesses
- NEW: Police say investigators are still searching waters around Utoya island for victims
- Police raid an area in eastern Oslo in connection with Friday's bombing, they say
- The man accused in Norway's twin terror attacks that killed at least 93 says he acted alone
- Police are looking into a 1,500-page manifesto purportedly written by the suspect
Oslo, Norway (CNN) -- The man accused of killing at least 93 people in Norway has said he carried out the bombing and mass shooting, authorities said Sunday, as an ashen-faced and openly weeping King Harald V led the nation in mourning.
The suspect has not pleaded guilty, and said he acted alone with no accomplice, acting National Police Chief Sveinung Sponheim told reporters Sunday.
A person wounded in the shootings on Utoya island died Sunday, Oslo University Hospital spokesman Jo Heldaas told CNN. Police raised the official death toll to 93 and said that number could increase as investigators continued searching waters around the island for victims who may have drowned trying to escape the shooter.
Also on Sunday, police conducted an operation in the eastern Oslo area of Slettelokka in connection with the bombing, police spokesman Anders Frydenberg told CNN.
The raid came as Norwegians gathered at a cathedral in the capital, just a few hundred meters from where the bomb exploded Friday, to mourn the victims of the attacks.
Police have not identified the suspect, though local television and newspaper reports have identified the man in custody as 32-year-old Anders Behring Breivik.
Attorney Geir Lippestad, who claimed to represent Breivik, told TV2 late Saturday that his client "is ready to explain himself" on Monday when it is anticipated he will make his first court appearance. Breivik believed the terrorist attacks were "horrible," but "in his head (they) were necessary," Lippestad said.
CNN was unsuccessful in its attempts to reach Lippestad for comment.
The revelation came as a 1,500-page manifesto purportedly written by Breivik surfaced.
Norwegian authorities would not confirm that the man in their custody wrote the manifesto, saying it would be part of the investigation.
"The manifesto was released on the same day the atrocities happened," Sponheim said.
"It's also new to us. We will look into the details of the manifesto."
The document, apparently compiled over a period of nine years, rants against Muslims and their growing presence in Europe and calls for a European civil war to overthrow governments, end multiculturalism and execute "cultural Marxists."
While they have arrested only one suspect, Sponheim said authorities have not ruled out the possibility that someone else was involved in the shooting at a political youth retreat on Utoya island. Statements from witnesses to the mass shooting "make it uncertain if it was more than one person," Sponheim said.
At least four people have not been accounted following the shooting on Utoya island that left at least 86 people dead.
Authorities Saturday were searching for bodies of victims in the bomb attack in downtown Oslo, where an explosion badly damaged a number of government buildings as well as the majority Labour Party office. On Sunday police said the area around the blast site would remain cordoned off, but members of the public in the area were not at risk.
"We no longer have reason to ask people to stay away from the (city) center," police said in a statement. "The police have no information that would indicate that the public is in danger."
Seven people have been confirmed dead from the bomb attack. Police said that the explosive was in a car.
Memorial shrines with flowers and candles dotted the city's streets Sunday.
At least 97 people were wounded in the attacks -- 30 in the blast and 67 in the mass shooting, Sponheim said. That total includes the person who died Sunday. The identities of the victims will be released once all the next-of-kin have been notified, Sponheim said.
Doctors at Oslo University Hospital Sunday were treating 31 patients injured in the terror attacks -- 18 of whom were critically or seriously injured, Heldaas said.
At the service Sunday, billed by the church as a "Mass for grief and hope," Prime Minister Jens Stoltenberg called the attacks "incomprehensible."
"Soon, names and photographs will be released. The enormity of the evilness will surface in all its horror, and that will be a new test for us all," Stoltenberg said.
"In the middle of all the tragedy, I am proud to live in a country that has managed to stand tall."
On Saturday, an employee at a Norwegian agricultural cooperative told CNN that the man identified in media reports as the suspect bought six tons of fertilizer from her company in May.
Oddmy Estenstad, of Felleskjopet Agr, said she did not think the order was strange at the time because the suspect has a farm, but after Friday's explosion in Norway's capital, Oslo, she called police because she knew the material can be used to make bombs.
"We are very shocked that this man was connected to our company," said Estenstad. "We are very sad about what happened."
Pope Benedict XVI on Sunday offered his "fervent prayers for the victims and families, invoking God's peace upon the dead and divine consolation upon those who suffer."
"At this time of national grief he prays that all Norwegians will be spiritually united in a determined resolve to reject the ways of hatred and conflict and to work together fearlessly in a shaping a future of mutual respect, solidarity and freedom from for coming generations," according to a statement released by Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone on behalf of the pope.
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton expressed U.S. solidarity with Norway.
"The United States strongly condemns any kind of terrorism no matter where it comes from or who perpetuates it, and this tragedy strikes right at the heart of the soul of a peaceful people," she said in a statement.
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