2022 Oslo shooting

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2022 Oslo shooting
C.J.Hambros plass after 2022 Oslo shootings.jpg
The police blockade at the location where the shooting took place
Location map Norway Oslo.png
Red pog.svg
London Pub
London Pub (Oslo)
Norway location map.svg
Red pog.svg
London Pub
London Pub (Norway)
Europe blank laea location map.svg
Red pog.svg
London Pub
London Pub (Europe)
Location Oslo, Norway
Coordinates 59°54′55″N10°44′26″E / 59.91528°N 10.74056°E / 59.91528; 10.74056
Date25 June 2022 (CEST UTC+02:00)
Attack type
Mass shooting
Weapons
Deaths2
Injured21
Motive
Accused
Charges

The 2022 Oslo shooting, commonly known in Norway as the Pride Shooting in Oslo (Pride-skyting i Oslo), [5] occurred on 25 June 2022, when two people were killed and twenty-one people were wounded in a mass shooting in Oslo, Norway. Police declared the incident as an "act of Islamist terrorism". The target may have been the Oslo LGBTQ pride event, which was hosted by the local branch of the Norwegian Organisation for Sexual and Gender Diversity. [4]

Contents

As of 2024, one person has been convicted in a lower court; possibilities for appealing the case have not been exhausted. [6]

Earlier, police arrested Zaniar Matapour, a Norwegian citizen from Sanandaj, Iran, who had lived in Norway since 1991. [7] [8] [9] They later confirmed that they had known of Matapour since 2015, saying that he had been radicalized into Islamic extremism. [3] They also said he had a "history of violence and threats", as well as mental health issues. [10] He has been convicted and sentenced to 30 years in prison for murder, attempted murder, and terrorism. [11] [12]

Shooting

The shooting occurred at locations associated with Oslo Pride, the local LGBT pride event hosted by the Oslo branch of the Norwegian Organisation for Sexual and Gender Diversity, the night before the planned pride parade in Oslo. The first shooting occurred at London Pub, a popular gay bar and nightclub. A journalist from the Norwegian public broadcaster NRK who was present stated he witnessed a man arrive with a bag, then pick up a weapon and start shooting. The journalist thought it was an air gun at first, until the glass shattered at the bar next door. [13] According to one witness, the perpetrator shouted " Allahu Akbar " as he started shooting. [14]

The perpetrator then moved to two more nearby locations, including the bar Per på hjørnet and a takeaway restaurant.

According to media, a uniformed security guard threw herself at the perpetrator. [15]

Police were called at 01:15 local time and arrived minutes later. [16] The suspect was detained five minutes after the shooting. [17] 80 to 100 people hid in the pub's basement during the attack, [4] and wounded people were lying both inside and outside the bar with the police describing the scene as "chaotic". [16]

Victims

Two people were killed and twenty-one others injured, ten of whom were critically injured while the other eleven were slightly injured. [18] [16] [19] [20] The deceased victims were a 60-year-old man, killed at the London Pub, and a 54-year-old man, killed at the Per på hjørnet bar. Both victims resided in Bærum. [21]

Oslo University Hospital reported that it had gone on red alert following the attack. [22] Ten people received medical treatment for serious injuries. [23] According to Eskil Pedersen, a number of those present in London Pub, including himself, were also on Utøya during the 2011 shooting by domestic terrorist Anders Behring Breivik. [24]

Investigation

At a press conference on 25 June 2022, the police said that they believe the attack could have been motivated by anti-LGBT hate and intended to target Oslo Pride. [25] [26] [27] [28]

Matapour's lawyer John Christian Elden said they suspended police interrogations because Matapour is afraid that the police are manipulating them. [29] Elden told Aftenposten that Matapour is afraid that the police will switch the recorded tapes and demand that everything must be written down. [30] Zaniar Matapour refused to appear for questioning, adding an additional demand—that his interrogation be made public in its entirety. [31]

In February 2023, media reported that on 19 June, an Islamist contacted a person on the chat service Telegram; the person contacted was an undercover agent of the Norwegian Intelligence Service; the Islamist wanted contact with IS and wrote to the agent that some "brothers" were planning an operation in Europe; the Islamist said that the "brothers" had two requests: They wanted approval from IS, prior to the operation, and the "brothers" also requested that the terror organization would take responsibility for the attack afterward, according to the information of newspaper VG. At the same time, the intelligence service knew the identity of the Islamist, even though he was using a handle/pseudonym (kallenavn); the agency also suspected who was pulling the strings (bakmann): Arfan Bhatti. [32] After the attack, the Islamist (but not Bhatti) sent a news article about the attack, to the undercover agent. Shortly after the attack, Bhatti was put into contact with an undercover agent who was posing as "an emir, a leader of the Islamic State"; the contact was established as a result of the dialogue between the (first-mentioned) Islamist and the (first-mentioned) undercover agent; the "fake emir" and Bhatti, kept in touch, for at least 8 weeks after the attack. [32]

Trial in 2024

Matapour photographed at a restaurant in Oslo, approx. nine hours before the mass shooting. Matapour.png
Matapour photographed at a restaurant in Oslo, approx. nine hours before the mass shooting.

In July 2024 the court handed down its verdict to Matapour: 30 years forvaring ; Media called it the harshest [6] sentence in modern times. Earlier (11 March 2024), the trial against Matapour started. [5] The verdict is scheduled to be handed down on July 4; he will get the verdict in prison. [33]

Five people were charged for having (at least) some responsibility for the shooting. [5] [34]

The suspect was identified as a 42-year-old Norwegian Kurd, Zaniar Matapour (born June 26, 1979), who moved from Iran to Norway in 1991 when he was 12. [38] He has been charged with murder, attempted murder, and acts of terrorism. [16] [3] [39] It is still unknown whether Matapour had accomplices. [40]

Matapour had an extensive criminal background from drug and assault offenses, but had received only "minor convictions" prior to the attack, according to a Norwegian prosecutor. [39] [16] His mother said that he had previously been diagnosed with paranoid schizophrenia. [41] On the day of the attack he was present and prayed several times at the Rabita Mosque. [42]

According to the public broadcaster NRK, Matapour had been in contact with Arfan Bhatti, an Islamist extremist with several convictions for violence. On 14 June 2022, Bhatti, who has also been represented by Elden in the past, posted a burning rainbow flag with a caption calling for the killing of LGBT+ people on Facebook. [43] Bhatti is a leading figure in Profetens Ummah, which has recruited people for Islamic State. [8] Verdens Gang reported that Matapour had been stopped by police in April when he was in the same car as Bhatti. [9] The police later confirmed that they had known of the suspect since 2015, believing that he had been radicalized into Islamic extremism. [3]

On 23 September, police stated Arfan Bhatti was suspected of involvement in the shooting, and that an arrest warrant had been issued regarding him. [44] As of 3 May 2024, Bhatti is in detention in Norway. [36] [45] [32]

Matapour's trial began on 12 March 2024. [46] On 4 July 2024 he was sentenced to 30 years in prison, with a minimum time of 20 years. [12]

Charges against a female detainee in Syria

In November 2023, media named a third person that has been charged. [47] Her name, Aisha Shazadi Kausar, was confirmed by other media in March 2024; [34] Since 2019 (and before the shooting), she has been detained at al-Roj (camp in Syria).

Aftermath

The pride parade and related events scheduled to be held in Oslo were cancelled after the shooting. National Police Chief, Benedicte Bjoernland, said in a statement that all Pride events in Norway should be postponed since the LGBT community is considered the "enemy" by Islamist extremists. [48] Police also advised people to celebrate Pride in smaller groups. [49] [3] Despite warnings, several thousand people still attended a makeshift parade, with armed police in the lead, and laid down rainbow flags as well as flowers at London Pub. [50]

The National Police Commissioner Marie Benedicte Bjørnland announced a temporary nationwide arming of police officers in Norway. [51] [52] Additionally, Norway entered its highest terror alert level, although the Norwegian Police Security Service had "no indication" further attacks were likely to happen. [4]

The Oslo Pride organisation organised a "Rainbow parade" walk for 10 September. [53] [54] [55]

Reactions

Domestic

Mourners laid the flowers with rainbow flags at the adjacent Herr Nilsen Jazz Club, the same day after the shooting. Mourning flowers at C.J.Hambros plass after shootings.jpg
Mourners laid the flowers with rainbow flags at the adjacent Herr Nilsen Jazz Club, the same day after the shooting.

Norwegian Prime Minister Jonas Gahr Støre called the shooting a "terrible attack on innocent people", and expressed solidarity with the LGBT community. [56] He added that the fight against hate was not over, but that it could be overcome together. [57] [58] Støre reiterated that while the perpetrator had Islamist motivations, the attack was the fault of an individual and not Norway's Muslim community. [59] In his speech on the anniversary of the 2011 Norway attacks, the Prime Minister said that "we know that queer people are the targets of hate, threats and violence. The incitement of hate is especially virulent against trans people. We will not accept this in Norway. We will use the memory of 22 July, in respect for those we lost, to turn our backs on this hate." [60] Støre also called on moderate Muslims to call out homophobic and transphobic attitudes and actions. [61]

The president of the Norwegian Parliament Masud Gharahkhani, a Norwegian-Iranian, stated that it was "sad and unacceptable" that such a brutal attack could occur. [62]

King Harald V stated that the attacks had horrified the royal family, and he expressed a need to stand together to defend freedom and diversity. [4] [52] Similarly, Crown Prince Haakon stated that Norway needed to protect the right "to love whomever we want". [63]

Bishop Olav Fykse Tveit, the Preses of the Church of Norway, expressed his belief that love would gain new strength following the attack. [57]

International

Many leaders of other countries were shocked, [4] [63] and gave condolences; [64] some, such as French President Emmanuel Macron, encouraged people to stand together. [4] [63] Ursula von der Leyen, president of the EU Commission, expressed that she was shocked by the attack. [4] [63] Finnish President Sauli Niinistö and Prime Minister Sanna Marin gave their condolences on Twitter and condemned all forms of terrorism. [64]

John Kirby, a White House spokesperson, stated that the White House was "horrified" by the shooting and expressed solidarity with Norway and the LGBT community. [4] [16] [63]

Analysis

Gender studies scholar Janne Bromseth said that the attack took place in the context of attacks on LGBT minorities and rights by the anti-gender movement in Norway, noting that "the anti-gender movement has (...) shifted boundaries in the public debate in Norway in recent years," resulting in "a harsher climate of debate where primarily organized TERFs have been given space to set the agenda for the 'debate on gender' and the alleged threat of 'gender ideology' to the natural order, although the criminal was a radical islamist, not a feminist, and his motives were religious." [65] The head of the Norwegian government's Extremism Commission, Cathrine Thorleifsson, as well as Amnesty International, linked the attack to a pattern of increased attacks on LGBT+ people in Norway and Europe, both on extremist online forums and open social media platforms. [66]

See also

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  8. 1 2 "Zaniar Matapour (42) siktet for drap, drapsforsøk og terrorhandling: Dette vet vi om gjerningsmannen" [Zaniar Matapour (42) charged with murder, attempted murder and acts of terrorism: This is what we know about the perpetrator]. Aftenposten (in Norwegian). 25 June 2022. Archived from the original on 26 June 2022. Retrieved 25 June 2022. Flere medier melder at Matapour har koblinger til Arfan Bhatti, som er en ledende figur for bevegelsen Profetens Umma. De ble kjent for å rekruttere en rekke nordmenn til å krige for IS i Syria.[Several media outlets have reported that Matapour has connections to Arfan Bhatti, who is a leading figure in the Profetens Ummah movement. They are known for recruiting several Norwegians to fight for IS in Syria.]
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  30. Lindberg, Aksel (25 June 2022). "Siktede krever at avhør skrives ned" [Suspect demands that interrogation is written down]. Aftenposten (in Norwegian). Archived from the original on 26 June 2022. Retrieved 25 June 2022. Til Aftenposten skriver Elden i en SMS at hans klient frykter politiet endrer båndopptak i etterkant av avhør. ... – Nei, bare at politiet ikke får ta opp på lyd eller bilde som kan manipuleres. Han har forlangt at det skrives ned i samtid og skriftlig vedtas og signeres av ham.[Elden wrote in SMS to Aftenposten that his client fears that the police are changing tape recordings after questioning. ... – No, just that the police are not allowed to record audio or video that can be manipulated. He has demanded that it be written down at the same time and in writing adopted and signed by him.]
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