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Utøya island shooting victims return to scene of Breivik’s killing spree

Norwegian investigators accompany about 500 people to see where rightwing extremist killed 69 at summer camp Survivors of the gun attack which claimed the lives of 69 people last month on the Norwegian island of Utøya revisited the massacre scene on Friday in the company of families and friends of those who died. About 500 people visited the island in light rain. As many as 1,500 people are expected to visit over the weekend, including the Norwegian prime minister, Jens Stoltenberg. Emilie Bersaas, 19, who survived the attack on the island youth camp, told Sky News she has avoided thinking about the man who admitted responsibility for the attacks, rightwing extremist Anders Behring Breivik: “Mostly I don’t want to because I don’t think he deserves my thoughts… I would rather that my friends who are not here today get my thoughts.” Norway’s general director of health, Bjørn-Inge Larsen, said he hoped the visits would help relatives with their grieving: “In the long run, we know that seeing the scene of where these murders were taking place is actually helpful.” The bereaved visitors are being told the exact circumstances in which their loved ones died by investigators. Psychologists and clergymen are on the island to offer support. As the visits got under way on Friday, the Norwegian prosecutor said a rightwing English blogger named in Breivik’s rambling “manifesto” would be questioned next week as part of the investigation. Paal-Fredrik Hjort Kraby told the Associated Press that Paul Ray, who used go by the name of Paul Sonato, was coming to Norway voluntarily. “He is mentioned as a mentor in Breivik’s manifesto, so it’s natural to question him about that,” said Kraby. Ray, who lives in Malta, said last month he never had any dealings with Breivik and condemned the massacre. Kraby said: “Ray is concerned about clearing his name when it comes to being a mentor.” Breivik’s 1,500-page document posted online before the attacks said his action was an attempt at cultural revolution. He claimed to be a member of the Knights Templar, which he portrayed as a network of modern-day crusaders who would launch a revolution against a Europe spoiled by Muslim immigration. On Friday, a court extended by four weeks the detention in solitary confinement of Breivik, who confessed to killing 69 people in the shooting rampage and eight people in a bombing in Oslo. The Oslo district court ruled he must be kept in complete isolation because of fears he would tamper with evidence and contact possible accomplices. Judge Hugo Abelseth acknowledged Breivik had described his isolation as “boring and monotonous, and a sadistic torture method,” but said he must nonetheless spend at least four more weeks there. Survivors and victims, who were not allowed into the court hearing, were represented by lawyers. Breivik could face a 21-year prison sentence if found guilty of terrorism charges, but that could be extended indefinitely if he is still deemed to pose a threat to the public. On Sunday, a month of mourning for the 77 people who died in the attacks will end with a national memorial service at Oslo Spektrum arena. Anders Behring Breivik Norway Europe Hannah Godfrey guardian.co.uk

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Man wanted in connection with hairdresser shooting found dead

Attack in south Wales that injured three believed to be domestic incident involving one of the victims, who worked in salon A man wanted in connection with a shooting at a hairdressers in Newport, south Wales, has been found dead in woods. A woman was shot in the knee and two others were injured after a gunman walked into the salon, named locally as Carol Ann’s Hairstylists, and opened fire. None of the injuries from the shooting, which took place just after 2pm, were said to be life threatening and the police refused to say whether two of the women – who suffered injuries to the neck and arm – had also been shot. “A male had entered the premises with a firearm,” said a spokesman for Gwent police. “Officers have recovered a firearm from the premises. A female received a gunshot wound to the knee. Another female has an injury to the neck and another female an injury to the arm. At this time the nature of these injuries has not been confirmed. “All three adult females are receiving medical treatment and are currently with police officers,” the spokesman added. The police helicopter was scrambled as officers searched the area. Police said they were called to the hairdressers just after 2.20pm following reports that several people had been injured. A councillor, Paul Cockeram, who represents the ward, said it was believed to be a domestic incident involving one of the women who worked in the salon. “I heard it was a domestic – whether it’s a husband or partner, I don’t know,” he said. “He came in and apparently fired indiscriminately, hitting several people.” Cockeram said the shop had been badly damaged by the gunfire and said it was lucky people had not been more seriously injured. “From what I have heard, the person he was after worked in the shop. And obviously he hit other people in there as well. “The shop is obliterated apparently. It’s amazing nobody died. I’ve heard some of them are in surgery at the moment. “The salon is predominantly a more senior sort of hairdresser’s salon … They would have been extremely frightened.” Cockeram added that the area was usually quiet. “It’s quite sad something like that has happened because it’s in an area that we have no problems at all, but obviously these domestic incidents can happen anywhere.” The injured women were taken to Royal Gwent hospital. A spokesman said: “We are working closely with Gwent police on the incident and we will give an update later.” Crime Wales Matthew Taylor guardian.co.uk

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Elizabeth Warren has taken one big step closer to a much-buzzed about run for Senate in Massachusetts. Yesterday the consumer advocate and Harvard professor filed paperwork to create an exploratory committee, a source tells the AP . She also put up a website— http://elizabethforma.com —where supporters can donate and…

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Authorities have arrested 60 alleged members of an Iraqi drug ring run out of a southern California social club, seizing some $630,000 in cash, 3,500 pounds of marijuana, and a cache of firearms and explosives, the Los Angeles Times reports. The El Cajon-based club has been a “hub…

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Welcome to London 2012. But first take a walk through the shopping centre

Take the train or tube to the Olympics and you’ll have to walk through Westfield Stratford City No matter which sport you are going to see when the third London Olympics begin , a visit to 2012 park will mean one thing – walking though a very large shopping centre first. The high-speed Javelin train from King’s Cross – set to deliver 25,000 spectators an hour to Stratford International – exits to a busy row of shops and restaurants, constructed by the Westfield Group. Crowds arriving at Stratford’s tube and mainline station can exit either via a concourse leading directly into Westfield’s complex or walk across an elegant rusted steel bridge – again built by Westfield, again delivering sports fans into the heart of the retail development. In all, for 70% of visitors, the entrance to the Olympics will be through the vast shopping development. Welcome to London 2012? Welcome to Westfield first. There are now fewer than four weeks until the 13 September opening of what claims to be the biggest “in town” shopping centre in Europe. Thousands of workers in fluroescent vests and hard hats race to and fro across the Westfield bridge to hang panelling, finish the electrics and install street furniture on the 180-acre site. Behind closed doors or plywood screens, the 300 shops, 50 restaurants, three hotels, 17 cinema screens and casino are being fitted out. The complex is already heavily branded, with the red Westfield logo stamped on buildings at almost every vista. Westfield Stratford City – as the vast retail and leisure complex has immodestly been named– is far from beautiful but there is no disputing that this enormous retail sprawl is remarkable. Most striking, perhaps, is the degree to which it and the Olympic park development, nearing completion just to the east, are entangled. The history of Westfield’s east London outpost (“Westfield East” and “Eastfield” were never considered as names, despite reports to the contrary, insists the company) began in 2004 when it acquired the struggling developer Chelsfield, and with it plans for an enormous retail and leisure complex in Shepherd’s Bush, west London, and a 25% stake in an even bigger project earmarked for east London. There was no question which was the more attractive prize. The brownfield Stratford site, unlike the Shepherd’s Bush project which has become a lucrative flagship for the Australian group, required vast investment in infrastructure. At that stage, says John Burton, the development director of Westfield Stratford City, no one expected London to win the Olympics. “So while we knew there was an opportunity here, what we couldn’t get our minds around was when that might occur.” Hosting the Olympics focused minds. “I suppose, if it hadn’t been that our chairman and MD said that we would deliver this in time for the Olympics, we probably would have delayed it.” The developer gave the Olympic Delivery Authority a significant leg-up, having already secured planning permission for 5,000 homes – most of which will serve as the athletes’ village before being resold – and investing heavily in transport infrastructure. One might consider unprecedented free global publicity, and a vast, captive and carefully shepherded audience for a fortnight, a rather nice thank you. Of course, aside from the “city” of the developer’s fantasies (a sense underscored by the fact that its postcode will be E20, until now existing only in BBC1′s EastEnders), there is a real Stratford. Cross Great Eastern Road from Stratford station rather than bearing left over Westfield’s bridge, and there is palpable apprehension among locals who have watched the complex rise from the ground. The suburb already has a shopping complex, the Stratford centre; if it was ever glossy, it isn’t now, with its low ceiling and over-bright strip lighting and tired lino floor. There is a 99p shop, and a cheap fashion shoe store, and traders selling plastic flowers and clothes on rails marked £3, £4, £5. Through the arcade, on High Street, is a row of market traders under permanent steel gazebos. They are being moved, they are not sure when, to the top end of the street, even further from any Olympic crowds or, post Games, Westfield shoppers who might lose their way and stumble into real east London. “It’s probably going to kill us,” says Mike Wischnia who is minding his girlfriend’s clothes stall. She has traded here for a decade, but business is horribly slow and he fears they’ll have to pack in. “Everything is going to be over the other side,” he says. “What’s the incentive to come over here?” Other traders, like many shoppers, are prepared to be open-minded for now. “It could be good, Westfield,” says one stallholder, selling nail varnish and hair accessories. “We haven’t got any ‘name’ shops any more.” Mostly, however, they feel uncertain and a bit apprehensive, she says. “The traders want to know what’s happening, I get that,” says Sir Robin Wales, the ebullient and refreshingly frank mayor of Newham, who has been cheerleader for the retail and sporting developments. “The centre and the market stalls are a value offer, which is really important for people who live in Newham, and we’ll defend that. I don’t want gentrification that drives people out. I want jobs for our people, and I want them to be able to shop in places where they can afford to. They may or may not shop at Westfield. I don’t care. My issue is to make sure they are able to work.” “Jobs, jobs and jobs” has been Wales’s mantra since the earliest days of the development. On this, he says, Westfield and many of its client retailers, including John Lewis, have been “absolutely stunning”. It has been his aim to ensure that 2,500 of the 10,000-plus jobs at the development go to local, long-term unemployed. The developer agreed to a “retail academy” to train locals. It’s all part of a longer-term, and vastly more ambitious, plan of convergence says Wales, where the six host boroughs want to raise east London, historically and intransigently poor, to average levels for the capital in jobs , poverty and health. About 20,000 long-term unemployed people will need to get into work for Newham to come close. “A century of deprivation. This is us trying to tackle it.” The challenge for the complex – and the city-changing powers it claims for itself – will come on 10 September next year, almost a year after its opening, when the Paralympics are over, and the crowds have peeled away, and Westfield Stratford City becomes just another shopping centre. Olympic Games 2012 Retail industry Regeneration London Local government Esther Addley guardian.co.uk

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Barack Obama has held more fundraising events in his first term than any of the last five presidents—and it’s not terribly close. According to new research reported by USA Today , Obama has held a whopping 127 fundraising events so far, outpacing George W. Bush (88), Bill Clinton (76), and…

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Oh, those crazy kids: After breaking their engagement less than a month ago, Jesse James and Kat Von D are back on. James broke the news by tweeting a romantic photo of himself and Von D with the caption “para siempre,” or “forever.” He later confirmed to People the engagement…

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Bank of America Corp. is cutting 3,500 jobs this quarter, and plans to cut many more in the quarters ahead, as part of a drastic plan to overhaul the company. A source tells the Wall Street Journal that the company will probably dispose of at least 10,000 jobs…

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No major relief for the markets today, at least not so far: The Dow was down about 100 points at open, resting below 10,900, according to MarketWatch . The S&P 500 and Nasdaq were also down, 7 points and 5 points, respectively. And the news from abroad isn’t any cheerier…

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Anna Hazare left jail today amidst a throng of supporters who cheered and tossed rose petals for India’s most prominent anti-corruption activist. “Whether I live or not, corruption shall not live,” Hazare told supporters, before heading to the public square of Ramlila Maidan to begin his hunger strike , according to…

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