European Anti-Terrorism Measures To Follow Norway Attacks

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The EU is set to introduce stringent tests to regulate the manufacture and sale of fertilisers and other materials used to make home-made bombs in the wake of Anders Behring Breivik’s mass murder in Norway last week (22 July).

The announcement came following an extraordinary meeting of the Council’s terrorism working party (TWP) and counter-terrorism group (COTER) convened in Brussels by the Polish presidency with the participation of the Norwegian authorities.

The Norwegian representatives briefed their European counterparts on the shootings and bomb attack which left at least 76 people dead and outlined the terms of the so-called “22 July Commission”, which has been announced by Norwegian Prime Minister Jens Stoltenberg to investigate the attacks.

EU
EU

The debate – which included representatives of Europol, the European External Action Service and the Commission in addition to the counter-terrorism groups – was designed to give delegates the opportunity to express condolences and solidarity with Norway and the Norwegian people.

Solidarity and clampdown

But the goal was also to exchange information and analysis and to start the process of drawing the lessons of this tragedy in order to better prevent and respond to such attacks in the future.

Timothy Jones, the representative of the EU counter-terrorism co-ordinator Gilles de Kerchove, afterwards told journalists that a series of measures had been triggered by the meeting, including the first ever deployment of a new Europol network designed to co-ordinate intelligence information relating to terrorism.

He said that further measures will follow on from the conclusion of Norway’s 22 Commission, including stronger regulatory controls on the manufacture and sale of materials such as fertilisers, used by terrorists including Breivik to make home-made bombs.

The Council had been considering such proposals already, Jones said, but they would now be prioritised in the wake of the attacks.

Use of psychologists to identify ‘Breivik’ cases

He added that a network of counter-terror advisers from different member states would also be convened in due course to see how best to predict and handle the particular type of psychological impulses that drove Breivik, in order to identify such cases earlier.

Asked to confirm if he was satisfied that Breivik had been acting alone, Jones said: “It is clear that he was in contact with other people, but the extent and nature of that contact is not yet fully clear. We need to wait and see what the full results of the police enquiry and the Norwegian commission are.”

The 22 Commission, agreed to by all Norwegian political parties, will analyse everything that happened, including the speed of the police response to Breivik’s second attack, on Utoeya island, which has been questioned.

The TWP brings together member states experts for the internal aspects of terrorism mainly representing ministries of interior, while in COTER experts from foreign affairs ministries focus on the external aspects of terrorism. Both groups meet regularly separately and usually twice a semester jointly.

The EU Counter-terrorism coordinator’s office takes part in both groups and is responsible for coordinatimg the EU’s overall action on terrorism.

Original article

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One thought on “European Anti-Terrorism Measures To Follow Norway Attacks

  • July 29, 2011 at 10:48 am
    Permalink

    Pull out the roots of terrorism
    Why always trying to hoodwink and to frighten the population with statements like this?
    And why continuing to use shifts and refuse to recognise that all the terrorism, of any kind, go out from the Masonic ateliers?
    It’s time to make order in the Order.
    It’s time to reject the fake brothers!

    Reply

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