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Police: Undetonated explosives were found on Norway's Utoya Island, where a gunman earlier opened fire on a youth camp.
[h=1]At Least 16 Dead in Norway
In Capital Bombing, Camp Shooting[/h] Suspect in custody after gunman dressed as a police officer opens fire at a youth camp on an island outside Oslo, where officials confirm 9 or 10 dead — hours after a massive car bomb explodes in Oslo, killing at least 7 people.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-14256712Police arrested the suspected gunman at the camp and the government have confirmed that he is Norwegian.
Police later said that he was also linked with the bomb attack. Reports described him as tall and blond.
As of 5:30pm NY time.No group has said it carried out the attacks.
[h=2]Analysis[/h] Gordon Corera Security correspondent, BBC News
The prime minister and justice minister have declined to speculate on a motive behind the attack but police are saying that they believe the car bomb and the shooting are linked and that they have a suspect in custody from Utoeya.
The ministers are confirming he is Norwegian. During the day, after an initial focus on an al-Qaeda link, the possibility of domestic extremism increasingly came into focus.
The choice of targets - government buildings and a political youth rally - suggested a possible political agenda rather than the mass casualty approach typically employed by al-Qaeda.
Constructing a large car bomb requires a degree of sophistication and the crucial factor for the police will be establishing how many people are behind this attack, whether any are still at large and to whom they might be connected.
At least seven people were killed in the bombing, which inflicted huge damage on government buildings in Oslo.
At least 10 more died at the camp, on an island outside Oslo, police say. One witness said he had seen 20 bodies.
The suspected gunman was arrested at the camp and the government have confirmed that he is Norwegian.
Police have said that he was also linked with the bomb attack. Reports described him as tall and blond.
http://www.foxnews.com/world/2011/07/22/explosion-damages-buildings-in-norwegian-capital/Although police would not speculate on who was responsible for Friday's attack or whether international groups were involved, Norway has been grappling with a homegrown terror plot linked to al-Qaida. Two suspects are in jail awaiting charges.
...
Many intelligence analysts said they had never heard of Helpers of Global Jihad, which took initial credit. Ansar al-Islam also took credit on some jihadist web sites.
Ayers said it appeared more than one person was involved.
http://www.foxnews.com/world/2011/0...dly-by-one-man-no-ties-to-islamist-terrorism/OSLO, Norway -- A Norwegian police official says the 32-year-old Norwegian man suspected of the Oslo bombing and a shooting at a youth camp does not appear to be linked to Islamist terrorism.
The official says the attacks probably have more in common with the 1995 attack on a U.S. federal building in Olkahoma City than the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks.
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/43857267/ns/world_news-europe/"Intuitively, the bombing is al-Qaida-related," Ranstorp told the Norwegian Nettavisen news service. But the new information about the suspected gunman — especially his nationality — "points to an internal rather than external extremist," he said.
"With this attack on Utoya, this could just be a crazy person," Ranstorp said.
At a late-night news conference, Oslo's acting police acting chief, Sveining Sponheim, addressed whether the 32-year-old Norwegian suspect might be affiliated with al-Qaida or another group, saying: "We do not know if he was involved in an extremist environment."
The bombing and shooting in Norway were quickly blamed on Islamic fundamentalists by many, but as investigators piece together the violent attacks, a Christian Nationalist looks more likely.
The alleged assailant is also identified as holding anti-Islamic and anti-immigrant views that are common among Norway's far right.
Muslim leaders in Norway swiftly condemned the attacks. “This is our homeland, this is my homeland,” said Mehtab Afsar, secretary general of the Islamic Council of Norway. “I condemn these attacks, and the Islamic Council of Norway condemns these attacks, whoever is behind them.”
It is amazing how many of these crazy people are Muslims...