Norway promises 'humane' conditions for mass killer ahead of sentencing for
massacre


 <http://www.thecanadianpress.com/> Description: The Canadian PressBy Julia
Gronnevet,Karl Ritter, The Associated Press | The Canadian Press – 9 hours
ago

*
<http://ca.news.yahoo.com/photos/undated-handout-picture-made-available-wedn
esday-aug-22-photo-164113493.html> Description: Undated handout picture made
available Wednesday Aug 22 2012 by Ila Prison showing one of the cells
inside the prison just outside Oslo, Norway where terror charged Anders
Behring Breivik has been held most of the time since the July 22 attacks in
Oslo and at Utoya last year. The verdict against Breivik is to be announced
on Friday August 24, 2012. (AP Photo/ Ila Prison / Glefs AS / NTB scanpix)

Undated handout picture made available Wednesday Aug 22 2012 by Ila Prison
showing …

OSLO - Those expecting Anders Behring Breivik to spend the rest of his days
alone in a cramped cell will be disappointed when the far-right fanatic
receives his sentence Friday for killing 77 people in a bomb and gun rampage
last year.

If declared insane, the confessed killer will be the sole patient of a
psychiatric ward that Norway built just for him, with 17 people on staff to
treat him.

If found mentally fit, he will remain isolated, for now, in the
high-security prison where he disposes of three 86-square-foot
(8-square-meter) cells: a bed room, an exercise room and a study.

Officials at Oslo's Ila Prison say the ambition would be to eventually
transfer Breivik to a section with other prisoners, who have access to a
school that teaches from primary grades through university-level courses, a
library, a gym, work in the prison's various shops and other leisure
activities.

It's all about a philosophy of humane prison treatment and rehabilitation
that forms the bedrock of the Scandinavian penal system.

"I like to put it this way: He's a human being. He has human rights. This is
about creating a humane prison regime," said Ellen Bjercke, a spokeswoman
for Ila (EE-luh) Prison.

Dealing with an unrepentant killer responsible for Norway's worst massacre
since World War II puts the system to, perhaps, its most challenging test
yet.

During his trial, Breivik, 33, coolly described how he set off a car bomb
that killed eight people and injured scores in Oslo's government district on
July 22 last year. Then he unleashed a shooting rampage that left 69 people
dead, mostly teenagers, at the summer camp of the governing Labor Party's
youth wing. The youngest victim was 14.

In testimony that was deeply disturbing to the bereaved, the self-styled
anti-Muslim militant said he was acting in defence of Norway by targeting
the left-wing political party he accused of betraying the country with
liberal immigration policies.

Since Breivik's guilt is not in question, the key decision for the Oslo
district court Friday is whether to declare him insane after two psychiatric
teams reached opposite conclusions on his mental health.

Its ruling will be read in a courtroom custom-built for Breivik's trial at a
cost of 40 million kroner ($6.8 million). A glass partition separates
Breivik from relatives of victims attending the hearing. Remote-controlled
cameras capture the proceedings, and a video feed is distributed to court
rooms around Norway, where other relatives can watch it live.

Prison officials say the special measures for Breivik are justified because
he presents a security risk that Norway's prison and justice systems
previously didn't have the infrastructure to deal with.

Some Norwegians disagree.

"To do that for just one person, when there are other things in Norway that
need to be taken care of, like elderly care and roads and such things — the
money could have been spent on other things," said Thomas Indreboe, who was
removed as a lay judge in the case when it emerged that he had advocated on
the Internet for Breivik to be executed. In Europe only Belarus still
applies the death penalty, according to Amnesty International.

Indreboe stood by his assertion that capital punishment would make sense in
Breivik's case and save "taxpayers from unnecessary expenditures."

Criminology researcher Thomas Ugelvik of the University of Oslo said that
would mean creating a totally different society.

"We wouldn't be Norway," he said. "We have a general need to offer humane
conditions in our welfare state, and the prison is part of the welfare
state."

Ila Prison has prepared itself for every possible outcome Friday. A
psychiatric ward was built just in case he is declared criminally insane. It
cost between 2 million and 3 million kroner ($340,000-$510,000), according
to Norway's Health Ministry.

The facility, featuring a 100-square-foot (9 square-meter) cell with a
bathroom, would offer Breivik some recreational and educational options with
therapists from a psychiatric hospital, but not the breadth of options
available to prison inmates.

Bjercke estimated the cost of keeping Breivik there at 7 million-10 million
kroner a year ($1.2 million-1.7 million).

That's not extraordinary in Norway. Anne Kristine Bergem, the chief
physician of the regional psychiatric centre for dangerous and violent
patients, said the average annual cost of care on her ward was nearly 6
million kroner per patient.

If found to be mentally fit, Breivik would face a sentence of "preventive
detention." Unlike a regular prison sentence — which can be no longer than
21 years in Norway — that confinement option can be extended for as long as
an inmate is considered dangerous to society. It also offers more programs
and therapy than an ordinary prison sentence.

While in isolation, Breivik has access to TV and newspapers and a computer,
but no Internet connection. He has three cells instead of one in
"compensation" for not having access to activities offered to other inmates,
Bjercke said. In addition, prison staff and a priest come see him more often
than other inmates, so that he has someone to talk to.

"Isolation is torture," Bjercke said.

Breivik, like other prisoners, is free to communicate with the outside world
with letters, as he has done since restrictions were lifted at the start of
this year. His defence lawyers have said he is already planning to write
books building on the 1,500-page manual on far-right terror he released
before the attacks.

Prison director Knut Bjarkeid wouldn't comment on any special security
measures taken to make sure Breivik doesn't escape. He said someone last
escaped from the prison, which doesn't have armed guards, in 2004, but was
caught within minutes.

During the trial, which transfixed Norway with its gruesome details, Breivik
insisted his actions were politically motivated and expressed horror at the
possibility of ending up in "the madhouse." His lawyers have said Breivik
would appeal an insanity ruling.

Whatever the outcome, Breivik has already proved to be so dangerous that
legal experts say he is not likely to walk free until he's an old man, if at
all.

That's more important than the conditions under which he's held, said
Christin Bjelland, deputy head of a national support group for victims'
families and survivors.

"Our primary goal is that he should be removed (from society) for all time,"
Bjelland said.

 

 

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