Aumenta o número de mortos. A televisão norueguesa (é só o que tenho no meu quarto) mostra as dimensões do atentado no centro da cidade. Surpreendente. Foi uma grande área atingida, pelo que estou vendo. Em local muito movimentado, diga-se de passagem. As ruas aqui do centro estão completamente desertas. Apenas policiais e o pessoal de apoio circula.
No campo, um atirador teria executado algumas pessoas que descansavam em uma área de veraneio do Partido Trabalhista. Estão associando o ocorrido ao atentado do centro. De toda maneira, o 22 de julho nunca mais será esquecido pelos noruegueses.
Dia triste para esse país tão alegre. Lamentável.
BBC NEWS – 22 July 2011 Last updated at 17:42 GMT
Twin terror attacks shock Norway
Norway has been hit by twin attacks – a massive bomb blast in the capital and a shooting attack on young people at a governing Labour Party youth camp.
At least seven people were killed in the bombing, which inflicted huge damage on government buildings in Oslo city centre.
Four more died at the camp, on an island outside Oslo, local media said.
One witness later said he had seen more than 20 bodies on the island, but police have not confirmed this.
Prime Minister Jens Stoltenberg, whose Oslo offices were among those damaged by the bomb, described the situation as “very serious”.
Norwegian media reports said the shootings on the island were carried out by a man in police uniform.
Police said the suspected gunman had been arrested, and later said he was also linked with the bomb attack, reports said.
No group has said it carried out the attacks.
Hours after the bomb struck Oslo, officials said some people were still inside the damaged buildings, some of which were on fire.
Analysis
Police are saying that they believe the car bomb and the shooting are linked and they are thought to have a suspect in custody from Utoeya. That means they should be getting a clearer idea of who was behind this attack.
An al-Qaeda linked group is still a strong possibility, based on opposition to the role of Norwegian forces or issues linked to the publication of cartoons of the prophet. There were arrests last year in Norway linked to an international terrorist plot.
However, at this stage other possibilities, including domestic extremists, cannot be ruled out.
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 connected.
Television footage from the government quarter showed rubble and glass from shattered windows in the streets and smoke from the fires drifting across the city. The wreckage of at least one car could be seen.
All roads into the city centre have been closed, said national broadcaster NRK, as security officials evacuated people from the area, fearing another blast.
Mr Stoltenberg, in a telephone call to Norwegian television, said all government ministers were safe.
He said he had been advised by police not to reveal his current location, but he is not thought to have been in central Oslo on Friday.
“Even if one is well prepared, it is always rather dramatic when something like this happens,” he said.
Egil Vrekke, Assistant Chief Constable of Oslo police told the BBC the rescue operation in Oslo was ongoing.
“We are issuing warnings just [to] make sure people are not in the area in case there are further explosions,” he told the BBC.
“We have cordoned off large areas. There are bomb experts at the scene investigating whether there are other devices in the area.”
A spokesman for Oslo University hospital said 10 people had been taken there for treatment, some with serious injuries.
A few hours after the explosion, reports emerged of the shooting at a Labour Party youth camp in Utoeya, an island outside the capital.
TV2 said at least four people had been killed and several injured – there were reports the gunman was wearing a police uniform.
“This created a panic situation where people started to swim from the island,” said Labour Party spokesman Per Gunnar Dahl.
Mr Stoltenberg, who had been due to visit the camp on Saturday, told TV2 the situation in Utoeya was critical.
‘Focus on rescue’
State Secretary Kristian Amundsen said Friday was a public holiday in Norway so the government offices were not as busy as they might usually have been.
“But there are many hundreds of people in these buildings every day,” he told the BBC.
“We have to focus on the rescue operation – there are still people in the building, there are still people in the hospital.”
Reuters said the oil ministry was among the other government buildings hit, while NRK journalist Ingunn Andersen said the headquarters of tabloid newspaper VG were also damaged.
“It’s complete chaos here. The windows are blown out in all the buildings close by,” she told AP.
Unconscious people
Oistein Mjarum, head of communications for the Norwegian Red Cross, which has offices nearby, said the blast could be heard across Oslo.
“This is a very busy area on Friday afternoon and there were a lot of people in the streets, and many people working in these buildings that are now burning,” he said.
Local resident Silvio told the BBC the blast shook everything in his apartment and that he saw several unconscious people in the street.
“If they were dead or not I wouldn’t be able to tell you but they were receiving assistance at the time,” he said.
Mr Mjarum said people across Oslo and Norway were in shock.
“We have never had a terrorist attack like this in Norway – if that’s what it is – but of course this has been a great fear for all Norwegians when they have seen what has been happening around the world.”
The United States has condemned the “despicable acts of violence” in Oslo, while the President of the European Council, Herman Van Rompuy, said he was “deeply shocked” by “these acts of cowardice for which there is no justification”.

