Norway deals with tragedies
Updated On Jul 23, 2011 09:44 pm IST
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Updated on Jul 23, 2011 09:44 pm IST
Rescue workers evacuate young people from the summer school meeting organised by the ruling Labour Party on Utoeya, an island outside Oslo.
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Updated on Jul 23, 2011 09:44 pm IST
Norwegian justice minister Knut Storberget and Prime Minister Jens Stoltenberg address the media.
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Updated on Jul 23, 2011 09:44 pm IST
A survivor (2nd, L) of the Utoya island shooting at the Norwegian Labour Party youth summer camp is reunited with her parents at Sundvolden, some 40 km south west of Oslo.
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Updated on Jul 23, 2011 09:44 pm IST
National flags are set at half mast at the Nordic embassies to Germany in Berlin.
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Updated on Jul 23, 2011 09:44 pm IST
A survivor (C) of the Utoeya island shooting at the Norwegian Labour Party youth summer camp is reunited with her parents at Sundvolden, some 40 km south west of Oslo.
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Updated on Jul 23, 2011 09:44 pm IST
Eskil Pedersen, the leader of the Norwegian Labour Youth league, gives a press conference at the Sundvolden Hotel, where survivors of the shooting are accommodated.
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Updated on Jul 23, 2011 09:44 pm IST
Norwegian foreign minister Jonas Gahr Stoere (C) and state secretray Gry Larsen (L) comfort an unidentified woman as they meet with survivors and relatives of the shooting at the Labour Youth League summer camp on the Utoeya island.
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Updated on Jul 23, 2011 09:44 pm IST
Mayor of Oslo Fabian Stang lights candles in Oslo Cathedral to commemorate the victims of Friday's blast and shooting.
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Updated on Jul 23, 2011 09:44 pm IST
Covered corpses are seen on the shore of the small, wooded island of Utoya, after a suspected right-wing Christian gunman in police uniform killed at least 90 people in a ferocious attack on a youth summer camp.
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Updated on Jul 23, 2011 09:44 pm IST
People light candles and lay flowers in central Oslo to pay tribute to the victims of twin attacks at the government headquarters building in Oslo and on a youth camp, Norway's deadliest post-war tragedy.
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Updated on Jul 23, 2011 09:44 pm IST
Soldiers block a street in the government headquarters building area in central Oslo, a day after the twin attacks.
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Updated on Jul 23, 2011 09:44 pm IST
Rescue workers set up a temporary camp outside the small island of Utoya.
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Updated on Jul 23, 2011 09:44 pm IST
Norway's Prime Minister Jens Stoltenberg is flanked by justice minister Knut Storberget (L) and state secretary Hans Kristian Amundsen (2nd L) as he hugs Labour Youth Wing leader Eskil Pedersen (R) in Sunvold.
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Updated on Jul 23, 2011 09:44 pm IST
Police officers in Sunvold take away an unidentifed person (C) who was at the tent camp during the July 22 shooting spree at the Utoya island, west of the capital Oslo, Norway.
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Updated on Jul 23, 2011 09:44 pm IST
People gather outside the Oslo Cathedral to mourn and show their respect for the victims of the July 22 shooting at a Norwegian Labour Youth League camp.
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Updated on Jul 23, 2011 09:44 pm IST
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