Oslo, Norway:
Three non-public rooms, as many budgies and an Xbox: the lawsuit introduced by Anders Behring Breivik towards the Norwegian state’s jail regime particulars circumstances that will make many prisoners envious.
Since 2022, Breivik has been serving his sentence within the high-security wing of Ringerike jail, on the shores of the lake that surrounds the island of Utoya the place he killed 69 individuals, most of them youngsters, on July 22, 2011.
Mere hours earlier, he had detonated a bomb in Oslo, killing eight others.
The 44-year-old right-wing extremist now has three private rooms to himself: a lounge, a school room and a small health club.
On the ground beneath — which he shares with one other prisoner, although by no means on the identical time — he has entry to a kitchen, a TV lounge with a video games console, a eating room and a room for visits.
“Breivik has way more area than another inmate in Ringerike jail,” the power’s director Eirik Bergstedt advised Norwegian information company NTB in December.
Though the decor is comparatively plain, the health club contains a number of train machines and the lounge has a big flat display screen TV and several other armchairs so he can play Xbox with the guards.
Regardless of these circumstances, Breivik, who in 2012 was sentenced to 21 years in jail — which might be prolonged indefinitely — has taken the Norwegian state to court docket this week to protest towards his jail regime.
In a tearful deal with to the court docket on Tuesday he mentioned authorities are attempting to “push me to suicide”.
It’s not the primary time Breivik has used robust phrases to protest his circumstances: in a letter to AFP in 2014, he threatened to go on starvation strike in jail if he didn’t get, amongst different issues, a Ps 3 as a substitute of the older Ps 2.
Nevertheless, it’s not the fabric circumstances of his detention that he’s protesting.
Held other than different inmates in high-security services for nearly 12 years, Breivik claims his prolonged isolation is a violation of Article 3 of the European Conference on Human Rights, which prohibits “inhuman” and “degrading” remedy.
A ‘dungeon’
“They constructed a dungeon round me” to “wall me in”, Breivik complained on Tuesday.
“I am not a hamster, I would like actual human relationships,” he mentioned.
He isn’t completely remoted, and along with his contacts with the guards — with whom he can play playing cards, cook dinner or share a meal — Breivik is allowed to see a pastor, a physiotherapist, a psychiatrist and a Crimson Cross customer with a canine that he can pet.
He himself ended contact with a customer appointed by the authorities, however for one hour every week he’s allowed to fulfill one other prisoner, additionally rigorously hand-picked, with whom he can socialise with, as an example with actions corresponding to making waffles.
Principally, these conferences happen round a desk, which he calls “Putin’s desk”, with a number of guards sitting between the 2 prisoners for safety causes.
Or a ‘palace’
Along with actions corresponding to basketball, walks or visiting the jail library, authorities have given him three budgies to conform together with his request for a pet.
“I had requested for a canine, a goat or a miniature pig with which you may make empathetic contacts, which generally is a good substitute for individuals in isolation”, commented Breivik, including that “budgies are higher than nothing.”
Bigger mammals “are usually not very sensible in a high-security space”, state lawyer Kristoffer Nerland retorted.
“Furthermore, veterinary authorities might need one thing to say about it.”
On social media, some customers have commented on the circumstances of detention, evaluating them to “a resort” or “a palace”.
“The Norwegian system is the best way it’s, however as a mom whose daughter he killed, it is arduous to see him complaining together with his good flat,” Lisbeth Kristine Royneland, head of a assist group for households of the victims, advised AFP.
Royneland who misplaced her 18-year-old daughter on Utoya.
“However at the least he is behind bars and he’ll by no means get out once more,” she added.
(Aside from the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV workers and is printed from a syndicated feed.)