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Four years after carnage, Utoya comes back to life

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Four years after Anders Behring Breivik's bloody rampage, the Norwegian island of Utoya will return to life this weekend as it hosts its first Labour youth camp since the carnage.

More than 1,000 participants -- a record number -- are expected to descend on the tiny heart-shaped island from Friday to Sunday, including a handful of survivors.

Breivik killed 69 people, most of them teenagers, on July 22, 2011 when he opened fire on a gathering of the Labour Party's youth wing (AUF), spreading terror as he hunted them down for an hour and 15 minutes, trapped on an island of barely 30 acres, surrounded by chilly waters.

Breivik later said he wanted to wipe out future leaders of the party, Norway's dominant political force, which he blames for the rise of multiculturalism.

Shortly before the Utoya massacre, the right-wing extremist had placed a bomb near the government headquarters in Oslo, some 40 kilometres (25 miles) away, killing eight people.

Rightwing extremist Anders Behring Breivik  who killed 77 people in twin attacks in Norway last year...
Rightwing extremist Anders Behring Breivik, who killed 77 people in twin attacks in Norway last year, makes a farright salute as he enters the Oslo district courtroom at the opening of his trial on April 16, 2012
Heiko Junge, Pool/AFP/File

"We are going to reclaim Utoya," AUF leader Eskil Pedersen vowed the day after the attacks, as normally-tranquil Norway reeled in shock from its worst peacetime atrocity.

Pedersen, who survived by fleeing aboard the only boat linking the island to the mainland, was insistent that Utoya remain the political forum it had been for decades.

Four years later, the site will finally reopen for the AUF summer camp in what is certain to be an emotionally-charged event.

Some families of victims were opposed to the idea that teenagers would return to the island to play football, flirt and hold fiery political debates at the site where their children were killed.

And for some survivors, it is still too soon to go back.

"I'm not sure I want to return to the camp, so I prefer to wait until I really want to go," 21-year-old Labour party member Marie Hogden told AFP.

A memorial on Utoya bears the names of the Norwegian Labour party youth activists killed on the isla...
A memorial on Utoya bears the names of the Norwegian Labour party youth activists killed on the island
Odd Andersen, AFP

With water up to her knees, she escaped Breivik's bullets by hiding behind a cliff.

- 'New page in history' -

Mani Hussaini, a 27-year-old from Syrian Kurdistan who was elected the head of AUF last year -- and who embodies the multiculturalism so reviled by Breivik -- acknowledged that this year's summer camp would be "special".

The 2012 camp was cancelled, and the two following years it was held at another location.

Families and survivors have visited Utoya on a few brief occasions.

Mani Hussaini  the president of Norwegian Labour party youth division (AUF)  says the return of the ...
Mani Hussaini, the president of Norwegian Labour party youth division (AUF), says the return of the summer camp marks a "new page" in Utoya's history
Odd Andersen, AFP

"Those who are preparing to return to Utoya are helping to write a new page in the history of the island," Hussaini told AFP.

Another survivor, 20-year-old Astrid Willa Eide Hoem, is one of those who has decided to be there this weekend.

"It's important for AUF as an organisation and for me as a person," she said.

"Utoya has to continue to be a workshop where young people learn about democracy, politics and activism."

- Wounds far from healed -

Activists set up flags of the Norwegian Labour party youth division (AUF) on Utoya island on August ...
Activists set up flags of the Norwegian Labour party youth division (AUF) on Utoya island on August 5, 2015, ahead of the camp
Odd Andersen, AFP

The leafy, green island has in the meantime received a facelift. Thanks to donations and the work of hundreds of volunteers, new buildings have been built, while the old ones have been renovated with respect to the dead.

The cafeteria, where 13 youngsters lost their lives, was initially to be torn down but has been maintained, with its bullet holes intact. But another wooden building is being built and will partially encompass the cafeteria as a memorial centre.

"The new Utoya should be a place to remember, to learn, and to cultivate political activism," Hussaini said.

A little further away, a memorial entitled "The Clearing" has been mounted in the woods: a giant steel ring suspended from the evergreens, bearing the names of 60 of the 69 victims.

In a sign that the wounds are far from healed, nine families did not want their loved ones' names to appear on the ring.

"It stings to see all these names, to see their ages," says survivor Emilie Bersaas, visiting the site with the media ahead of the reopening.

"But Utoya has to carry on. So many major political developments were born around a campfire here."

Breivik is serving a 21-year prison sentence, which can be extended indefinitely as long as he is considered a danger to society.

Four years after Anders Behring Breivik’s bloody rampage, the Norwegian island of Utoya will return to life this weekend as it hosts its first Labour youth camp since the carnage.

More than 1,000 participants — a record number — are expected to descend on the tiny heart-shaped island from Friday to Sunday, including a handful of survivors.

Breivik killed 69 people, most of them teenagers, on July 22, 2011 when he opened fire on a gathering of the Labour Party’s youth wing (AUF), spreading terror as he hunted them down for an hour and 15 minutes, trapped on an island of barely 30 acres, surrounded by chilly waters.

Breivik later said he wanted to wipe out future leaders of the party, Norway’s dominant political force, which he blames for the rise of multiculturalism.

Shortly before the Utoya massacre, the right-wing extremist had placed a bomb near the government headquarters in Oslo, some 40 kilometres (25 miles) away, killing eight people.

Rightwing extremist Anders Behring Breivik  who killed 77 people in twin attacks in Norway last year...

Rightwing extremist Anders Behring Breivik, who killed 77 people in twin attacks in Norway last year, makes a farright salute as he enters the Oslo district courtroom at the opening of his trial on April 16, 2012
Heiko Junge, Pool/AFP/File

“We are going to reclaim Utoya,” AUF leader Eskil Pedersen vowed the day after the attacks, as normally-tranquil Norway reeled in shock from its worst peacetime atrocity.

Pedersen, who survived by fleeing aboard the only boat linking the island to the mainland, was insistent that Utoya remain the political forum it had been for decades.

Four years later, the site will finally reopen for the AUF summer camp in what is certain to be an emotionally-charged event.

Some families of victims were opposed to the idea that teenagers would return to the island to play football, flirt and hold fiery political debates at the site where their children were killed.

And for some survivors, it is still too soon to go back.

“I’m not sure I want to return to the camp, so I prefer to wait until I really want to go,” 21-year-old Labour party member Marie Hogden told AFP.

A memorial on Utoya bears the names of the Norwegian Labour party youth activists killed on the isla...

A memorial on Utoya bears the names of the Norwegian Labour party youth activists killed on the island
Odd Andersen, AFP

With water up to her knees, she escaped Breivik’s bullets by hiding behind a cliff.

– ‘New page in history’ –

Mani Hussaini, a 27-year-old from Syrian Kurdistan who was elected the head of AUF last year — and who embodies the multiculturalism so reviled by Breivik — acknowledged that this year’s summer camp would be “special”.

The 2012 camp was cancelled, and the two following years it was held at another location.

Families and survivors have visited Utoya on a few brief occasions.

Mani Hussaini  the president of Norwegian Labour party youth division (AUF)  says the return of the ...

Mani Hussaini, the president of Norwegian Labour party youth division (AUF), says the return of the summer camp marks a “new page” in Utoya's history
Odd Andersen, AFP

“Those who are preparing to return to Utoya are helping to write a new page in the history of the island,” Hussaini told AFP.

Another survivor, 20-year-old Astrid Willa Eide Hoem, is one of those who has decided to be there this weekend.

“It’s important for AUF as an organisation and for me as a person,” she said.

“Utoya has to continue to be a workshop where young people learn about democracy, politics and activism.”

– Wounds far from healed –

Activists set up flags of the Norwegian Labour party youth division (AUF) on Utoya island on August ...

Activists set up flags of the Norwegian Labour party youth division (AUF) on Utoya island on August 5, 2015, ahead of the camp
Odd Andersen, AFP

The leafy, green island has in the meantime received a facelift. Thanks to donations and the work of hundreds of volunteers, new buildings have been built, while the old ones have been renovated with respect to the dead.

The cafeteria, where 13 youngsters lost their lives, was initially to be torn down but has been maintained, with its bullet holes intact. But another wooden building is being built and will partially encompass the cafeteria as a memorial centre.

“The new Utoya should be a place to remember, to learn, and to cultivate political activism,” Hussaini said.

A little further away, a memorial entitled “The Clearing” has been mounted in the woods: a giant steel ring suspended from the evergreens, bearing the names of 60 of the 69 victims.

In a sign that the wounds are far from healed, nine families did not want their loved ones’ names to appear on the ring.

“It stings to see all these names, to see their ages,” says survivor Emilie Bersaas, visiting the site with the media ahead of the reopening.

“But Utoya has to carry on. So many major political developments were born around a campfire here.”

Breivik is serving a 21-year prison sentence, which can be extended indefinitely as long as he is considered a danger to society.

AFP
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