Anders Behring Breivik, who killed 77 people last July, on Monday said he wanted to apologise for killing 'innocent' people in his Oslo bombing, but offered no similar apology for the Utoeya massacre.He also insisted that not only his victims and their families had their lives ruined on July 22: "I also lost everything," he lamented to the court.For the first time since his trial started on April 16, the 33-year-old right-wing extremist voiced a small ounce of regret for his actions."I would like to offer a large apology" to those who were injured or killed in the bombing of an Oslo government building as they were just passing by and had no political connections, he said. "They are not defined as legitimate targets."But when prosecutor Enga Bejer Engh asked if he wanted to say the same to any of the 69 people, mainly teens, slaughtered in his shooting massacre on the nearby island of Utoeya after the bombing, Breivik said, "No, I do not."He reiterated that youngsters attending a summer camp hosted by the ruling Labour Party's youth wing were 'legitimate targets', as 'political activists' working for the 'deconstruction of Norwegian society' through the multiculturalism he insists is leading to a 'Muslim invasion' of the country.Instead, he insisted that "everyone who is linked to the (government) and the Labour Party ... should issue a large apology" to the Norwegian people.

COMMERCIAL BREAK
SCROLL TO CONTINUE READING