Norway remembers Oslo victims
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Updated on Jul 23, 2012 04:14 pm IST
A girl holding a flower attends a concert at City Hall Square in Oslo. Norwegians gathered in thousands at sombre memorials to the 77 people killed a year ago by far-right gunman Anders Behring Breivik, to show his bloody rampage had done nothing to change their dedication to an open society. The concert is organised as part of the events marking the first-year anniversary of the twin Oslo-Utoeya massacre by Breivik in Norway. (Reuters/Leonhard Foeger)
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Updated on Jul 23, 2012 04:14 pm IST
People attend a concert at City Hall Square in Oslo marking the first-year anniversary of the massacre. (Reuters/Leonhard Foeger)
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Updated on Jul 23, 2012 04:14 pm IST
Norwegian crown prince Haakon, centre, during a concert in the City Hall Square in Oslo, Norway, marking of the first anniversary of the mass killing in Norway. (AP/Audun Braastad)
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Updated on Jul 23, 2012 04:14 pm IST
US musician Bruce Springsteen performs at a concert in the City Hall Square in Oslo, Norway, marking of the first anniversary of the mass killing in Norway. (AP/Vegard Groett)
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Updated on Jul 23, 2012 04:14 pm IST
Flowers in a vase are pictured on the shores of Utoeya Island during an event to mark the first anniversary of the attacks by right-wing extremist Anders Behring Breivik.(AFP/ Daniel Sannum Lauten)
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Updated on Jul 23, 2012 04:14 pm IST
Norwegian Princess Martha Louise and her brother, Crown prince Haakon, attend a concert in the City Hall Square in Oslo. (AFP/Audun Braastad)
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Updated on Jul 23, 2012 04:14 pm IST
Norway's Prime Minister Jens Stoltenberg (C) meets with attendees before the wreath laying ceremony on Utoeya Island to mark the first anniversary of the attacks by right-wing extremist Anders Behring Breivik.(AFP/Daniel Sannum Lauten)
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Updated on Jul 23, 2012 04:14 pm IST
Norway's Prime Minister Jens Stoltenberg holds a flower on his way to the wreath laying ceremony at Utoeya Island with members of the Labor Youth of Norway (AUF), guests and relatives of those who died a year ago.(AFP/Daniel Sannum Lauten)
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Updated on Jul 23, 2012 04:14 pm IST
Theodor Christopher Jaeger Lindhjem, 2-year-old from Oslo, lays down a flower outside the cathedral in Oslo on the first anniversary of a bombing and shooting rampage in Oslo and on Utoya Island.(AP/Lise Aserud)
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Updated on Jul 23, 2012 04:14 pm IST
Norway's Prince Haakon and Princess Mette-Marit light a candle in Hole Church near Utoeya island during a remembrance ceremony on the anniversary of the massacre. (AFP/Terje Bendiksby)
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Updated on Jul 23, 2012 04:14 pm IST
Bereaved families and friends of the 69 people who were gunned down and killed at Uoeya Island in the Tyrifjord a year ago, are ferried across to the island on the first anniversary of the massacre. (AFP/Vegard Groett)
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Updated on Jul 23, 2012 04:14 pm IST
A couple hugs each other as they look down to Utoeya Island on the first anniversary of the massacre. (Reuters/Leonhard Foeger)
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Updated on Jul 23, 2012 04:14 pm IST
The massacre that rocked the country last year: A man was seen mourning for the victims of the massacre on an island in the countryside and the bomb blast in the capital.(Reuters/Wolfgang Rattay)
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Updated on Jul 23, 2012 04:14 pm IST
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