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Rinden homenajes a las víctimas del doble atentado de Oslo

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  • A woman mourns in front of a flowers that were placed on the market square outside the Oslo cathedral to commemorate the victims of a bomb blast and a rampage

    A woman mourns in front of a flowers that were placed on the market square outside the Oslo cathedral to commemorate the victims of a bomb blast and a rampage

    A woman mourns in front of a flowers that were placed on the market square outside the Oslo cathedral to commemorate the victims of a bomb blast in the capital and a rampage on an island in the countryside July 23, 2011. A bomb ripped through Oslo's central government district on Friday killing seven people, police said, and hours later a suspected right-wing Christian gunman in police uniform killed at least 84 people in a ferocious attack on a youth summer camp of Norway's ruling Labour party on a nearby island. (NORWAY - Tags: CIVIL UNREST CRIME LAW)

  • FLORES FRENTE A LA EMBAJADA NORUEGA EN DINAMARCA

    FLORES FRENTE A LA EMBAJADA NORUEGA EN DINAMARCA

    COP001. COPENHAGE (DINAMARCA), 23/07/2011.- Carlo Baldmin y su hija Cillie dejan flores frene a la Embajada noruega en Copenhage, en Dinamarca, hoy, sábado 23 de julio de 2011. Un hombre noruego de 32 años ha sido arrestado como presunto autor de los dos atentados perpetrados ayer en el centro de Oslo y en un campamento juvenil socialdemócrata de la isla de Utøya, vecina a Oslo, que han costado la vida al menos a 91 personas, según fuentes policiales. La policía noruega busca a un posible cómplice del presunto autor. Hasta ahora se partía de la base de que el sospechoso, detenido después de la matanza en la isla, donde al menos han fallecido 84 personas, había actuado en solitario. EFE/SOEREN BIDSTRUP ***PROHIBIDO SU USO EN DINAMARCA***

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    Three-year-old Adam Backman in the background) is flanked by family members as he places flowers at the Norwegian Embassy in Stockholm on July 23, 2011 in support of the victims of the Norway July 22 bombing and shooting spree. The Norwegian suspect in the double attacks that left at least 92 dead described himself as a fundamentalist Christian, said police, as evidence emerged that he had flirted with the political far-right. The 32-year-old, previously unknown to police, was arrested Friday after a bomb blast in central Oslo killed seven people and a shooting rampage at a youth camp near the capital left at least 85 dead and scores wounded. AFP PHOTO / SCANPIX SWEDEN - FREDRIK PERSSON

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