Norwegian court prepares to review ruling that mass killer Anders Behring Breivik was treated ‘inhumanely’
On July 22, 2011, Breivik carried out two attacks, first killing eight people by detonating a bomb at the foot of a government building in Oslo, before killing
69 more at a Labour Party youth camp
A Norwegian court will on Tuesday examine the state’s appeal against a ruling that right-wing extremist and mass murderer Anders Behring Breivik has been treated inhumanely since being jailed for killing 77 people nearly six years ago.
A lower court made waves in April when it found that Breivik’s human rights were violated as he was subjected to “inhumane” and “degrading” treatment in prison – a decision that disturbed many families of the victims, mostly teenagers at a summer island camp.
“We hope that the state wins this new round, that justice digs deeper into the case,” said the head of a family support group, Lisbeth Kristine Royneland, whose 18-year-old daughter was shot dead by Breivik in the killing spree on Utoya island.
Breivik is imprisoned in a 30 square-metre three-cell complex where he’s allowed to play video games and watch television on two sets. The 37-year-old also has a computer without internet access, gym machines, books and newspapers. But beyond these comfortable material conditions, a district court judge had ruled that security measures took excessive precedence over human rights.
We hope that the state wins this new round, that justice digs deeper into the case
She pointed to the fact Breivik had been kept isolated from other inmates “in a prison inside a prison”, without enough social activities. The ruling also questioned the many potentially “humiliating” strip searches, the systematic use of handcuffs and other frequent awakenings at night, especially in the early days of his imprisonment.