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The 2011 Norway attacks were a bombing in Oslo and a series of shootings at Utøya on Friday, 22 July 2011. The first attack was a bomb exploding in Regjeringskvartalet, the executive government quarter of Oslo, and the second an attack on a youth camp organized by the youth organization (AUF) of the Norwegian Labour Party (AP) on the island of Utøya in Tyrifjorden, Buskerud.
The first attack was a car bomb explosion in Oslo within Regjeringskvartalet, the executive government quarter of Norway, at 15:25:22 . [1] The bomb was placed inside a van [14] next to the tower block housing the office of the then Prime Minister Jens Stoltenberg. [15] The explosion killed 8 people and injured at least 209 people, 12 severely.
The Oslo Central Station bombing (Norwegian: Bombeattentatet på Oslo S) was a bomb attack on the central train station of Oslo, the capital of Norway, on 2 July 1982. The homemade bomb was hidden in a locker at Østbanehallen and the explosion caused extensive damage to the station. A young woman, Elin Stoltenberg Dahl was killed. [1]
Police and fire officials in Bowling Green are responding to a large explosion at a gas station, according to a report from the Bowling Green Daily News.. Around 4:50 p.m. Monday, officials from ...
The teenage gunmen who put innocent lives in danger when they opened fire at a 24-hour Northeast Minneapolis gas station earlier this year, will not be going to prison after agreeing to plea deals ...
Police investigating the explosion said the man and woman, both aged in their 40s, were arrested on Monday for alleged offences contrary to the Non-Fatal Offences Against the Person Act 1997.
Oslo, Norway: 2 July 1982 1 0 Oslo Central Station bombing: Explosion of a homemade bomb in a locker of the station. Unnamed 18-year-old man Tain-l'Hermitage and Marseille, France 31 December 1983 5 54 TGV train and Marseille station bombings: Two bombs went off on a high speed TGV train and another at the Gare de Marseille-Saint-Charles.
The Centre was opened on 22 July 2015, at the ground floor of the high-rise building in Regjeringskvartalet of Oslo, and was temporarily moved to Teatergata 10 in 2020 due to renovation work in the government building complex. The 22 July Centre is located at Teatergata 10, in the government building complex in central Oslo. [2]