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A record number of people are attending this weekend's camp. Youtube/AFP

Young Norwegian activists are back on Utoya in defiance of Anders Behring Breivik

It’s the first time Labour’s Youth Camp has been held on the island since the 2011 attack.

FOUR YEARS AFTER Anders Behring Breivik’s bloody rampage, young Norweigan activists have returned to Utoya.

Breivik had target the summer youth camp of Norway’s Labour Party, and this weekend the party is hosting its first youth camp on Utoya island since the carnage.

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

Many of the teenagers arrived on Utoya on Thursday, with many pitching their tents near the cafeteria, a poignant symbol of the massacre as Breivik killed 13 youths there. Bullet holes can still be seen in the building.

The atmosphere was relaxed as AUF head Mani Hussaini told the delegates in his opening speech: “It’s good to be back home.”

Breivik killed 69 people, most of them teenagers, on 22 July 22, 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 40km away, killing eight people.

“We are going to reclaim Utoya,” 2011 AUF leader Eskil Pedersen vowed the day after the attacks, as normally-tranquil Norway reeled in shock from its worst peacetime atrocity.

utoya 1 A memorial representing the wound left behind on Utoya was designed earlier this year. © Jonas Dahlberg Studio © Jonas Dahlberg Studio

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.

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”.

PastedImage-39373 Norway's Labour party youth division (AUF) is returning to the island. Youtube / AFP Youtube / AFP / AFP

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.

“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.”

Norway Massacre Breivik was sentenced to 21 years in prison but he will almost certainly never leave prison. AP / Press Association Images AP / Press Association Images / Press Association Images

Wounds far from healed

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.

Before the seminars and speeches began on Friday, the teenagers held high-spirited games of football or volleyball, although armed police guards kept a careful watch.

Two police boats are guarding the waters around Utoya.

Many of the delegates wore T-shirts bearing the party slogan “Working Class Hero”.

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

Norway Massacre The ferryboat which Anders Behring Breivik used to get to Utoya island. AP / Press Association Images AP / Press Association Images / Press Association Images

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 2014

Read: Oslo university snubs killer Breivik’s application to study >

Read: Norway’s memorial to Utoya island massacre is stunning >

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    Mute Big Beats
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    Sep 13th 2024, 12:15 PM

    Hooping for a bright future.

    82
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    Mute Buster Lawless
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    Sep 13th 2024, 12:24 PM

    @Big Beats: fantastic news,we have tons of potential…now with these premier standard facilities….no reason why basketball shouldn’t be massive in Ireland

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    Mute Martin Finnerty
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    Sep 13th 2024, 1:28 PM

    That’s the equivalent of 113 Bike Shelters

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    Mute Basildon Joe
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    Sep 13th 2024, 12:31 PM

    What a waste. They need to pump that money into grass-roots football and make Ireland competitive again. Who the hell plays basketball, waste.

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    Mute Buster Lawless
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    Sep 13th 2024, 12:35 PM

    @Basildon Joe: brilliant idea, let’s continue funding the largesse, wastage& incompetence in the FAI to the detriment of other sports that we may ( hopefully) thrive & succeed at

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    Mute Basildon Joe
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    Sep 13th 2024, 12:36 PM

    @Buster Lawless: now delaney is gone surely they can progress and not squander the funding, in my honest opinion buster.

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    Mute Orban Orban
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    Sep 13th 2024, 1:24 PM

    @Basildon Joe: the Fai was given €30 million in 2020. That’s €8 million less than this project. Look at what that €38 million is being used for. 4 sports will get to use the building/facility which are all Olympic sports as squash is starting in 2028. Where has the €30 million gone. Since the Fai were given that money Ireland has had their worst run internationally is living memory. What facilities have the Fai used to make grassroots better since given that money. Should we just give them another €30 million. Never heard of coaches going into schools. Havnt seen any pitches being built. Clubhouses or changing rooms being built. National lottery won’t give them money cause it will just disappear. The Fai needs to make a little effort around the country before they get another penny.

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    Mute Sea Point
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    Sep 13th 2024, 1:50 PM

    @Basildon Joe: 200 clubs and 30000 players, so no, not a waste of money. Unlike the finacial sinkhole that domestic football is in Ireland…

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    Mute Basildon Joe
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    Sep 13th 2024, 2:31 PM

    @Sea Point: yeah but come on its pretty much a national sport for Ireland behind GAa. I just want to see Ireland improve as they are shocking right now and need all the help they can get.

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    Mute Orban Orban
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    Sep 13th 2024, 3:03 PM

    @Basildon Joe: they got €30 million help 4 years ago. Government can’t keep throwing money at the Fai with zero return. No facilities, pitch upgrades. Nothing.

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    Mute Basildon Joe
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    Sep 13th 2024, 3:20 PM

    @Orban Orban: it makes me sick, and the kids suffer now watching that dire rubbish.

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    Mute M To The B
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    Sep 13th 2024, 12:45 PM

    Sure they had to jump through a few hoops to net that permission

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    Mute Aidan Conlon
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    Sep 13th 2024, 3:13 PM

    No basketball court in my town. There would be nothing wrong with spreading the wealth a little to encourage more communities across the country to take up the sport, or even a place a few teenagers could hang out, shoot a few hoops.

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    Mute halfman halftea
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    Sep 13th 2024, 3:35 PM

    @Aidan Conlon: You should contact your local coco. SDCC have put up quite a few over the years.

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    Mute qffaffaf affrafrfraf
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    Sep 13th 2024, 2:29 PM

    Waste of money, we’re not a basketball country and never will be.

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    Mute Hibernicus
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    Sep 13th 2024, 3:12 PM

    @qffaffaf affrafrfraf: Well, seeing as we are s**te at football, we may as well try funding something else. Worked out fairly well for rugby.

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    Mute Tezmond McVicar
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    Sep 13th 2024, 1:29 PM

    How about pumping this kind of money into grass roots football instead of squandering money on a minority American sport!?

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    Mute Basildon Joe
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    Sep 13th 2024, 3:37 PM

    @Tezmond McVicar: my point exactly Tez. Disgusting waste of money on this toilet.

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    Mute offside again
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    Sep 13th 2024, 12:19 PM

    So they can perfect their, ahem, gaelic fooballing (haha) skills.

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    Mute Buster Lawless
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    Sep 13th 2024, 12:26 PM

    @offside again: ah kevvy, take a breather, a day off …. Go away down beach with dogs, juvenile trolling ISN’T the he all & end all

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    Mute offside again
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    Sep 13th 2024, 12:41 PM

    @Buster Lawless: take your own advice and stop stalking whilst you’re at it.

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    Sep 13th 2024, 12:53 PM

    @offside again: kevvy, you probably know this with your weirdo stalking but I go down strand 1st thing every morning with the best doggies in Ireland…. lately cause of your delusional ramblings I DO make sure I have phone with me though

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    Mute Vince Cable
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    Sep 13th 2024, 12:57 PM

    @Buster Lawless: Kevin Kerr is the Zodiac Killer

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    Sep 13th 2024, 1:30 PM

    @Vince Cable: baby reindeer, lol

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    Sep 13th 2024, 1:31 PM

    @Buster Lawless : you actually get up in the morning ? Ok fair enough. It’s good of the dogs to bring you for a walk I suppose.
    I hope you pick up their poo after them.

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    Mute PAUL C
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    Sep 13th 2024, 3:58 PM

    Any hence they will sort out the entrance ??

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    Mute B McCurragh
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    Sep 13th 2024, 5:37 PM

    Great facilities in Dublin to be fair …….

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