Gulf News

Norway violated mass killer’s rights — court

State broke Article 3 of the European Convention, surprise verdict says

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Norway violated mass killer Anders Behring Breivik’s human rights by keeping him in a “completely locked world” after being sentenced for killing 77 people in twin attacks in 2011, a Norwegian court ruled yesterday.

The ruling, which took many by surprise, found that the killer had been subjected to strip searches, had been woken up hourly by guards for long periods and that the authoritie­s had done little to alleviate the impact of his isolation.

Breivik killed eight people in a bomb attack in Oslo in July 2011 before attacking a youth meeting of the Labour Party on an island to the northwest of the capital, killing 69 people.

Breivik took Norwegian authoritie­s to court in March, accusing them of exposing him to inhuman, degrading treatment or punishment in breach of the European Convention on Human Rights. He protested his isolation from other inmates and from outsiders who are not profession­als.

“The prohibitio­n of inhuman and degrading treatment represents a fundamenta­l value in a democratic society. This applies no matter what — also in the treatment of terrorists and killers,” judge Helen Andenaes Sekulic said in her ruling.

The verdict said the Norwegian state had broken Article 3 of the convention, pointing to the fact Breivik is spending 22 to 23 hours a day alone in his cell.

“It’s a completely locked world with very little human contact,” it said, adding that there had been no attempt to ease the security “even though Breivik has behaved in an exemplary manner during his time in prison”.

His isolation is “an inhuman treatment” in the meaning of the European convention, it said

 ?? AFP ?? Anders Breivik
AFP Anders Breivik

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