Man found guilty of deadly shooting during Oslo Pride celebrations

A Norwegian court has found a man guilty of carrying out a deadly shooting at a gay bar during Oslo Pride celebrations in 2022. Zanier Matapour killed two people and seriously injured nine others after opening fire into a crowd outside the London Pub, a popular gay bar in the Norwegian capital. The

Man found guilty of deadly shooting during Oslo Pride celebrations

A Norwegian court has found a man guilty of carrying out a deadly shooting at a gay bar during Oslo Pride celebrations in 2022.

Zanier Matapour killed two people and seriously injured nine others after opening fire into a crowd outside the London Pub, a popular gay bar in the Norwegian capital.

The Oslo District Court said Matapour, fired 10 rounds with a machine gun and eight shots with a handgun into the crowd.

“This is a great relief,” the head of the support group for survivors and victims’ relatives, Espen Evjenth, who was struck by a bullet, told public broadcaster NRK.

“This verdict is an important step to establish a common understanding in our society about what happened.”

Prosecutor Aud Kinsarvik Gravas called it “the right outcome” and “a historically severe punishment.”

The court had been presented with extensive video material of the attack. Bystanders managed to overpower Matapour and he was then arrested.

Matapour, who was born in Iran and immigrated to Norway as a child, had sworn allegiance to the so-called Islamic State (IS), prosecutors said.

During the course of the trial, both the prosecution and the defence agreed Matapour had fired into the crowd and there was no disputing that the attack had been motivated by terrorism.

Matapour’s lawyer, Marius Dietrichson, however, sought an acquittal, saying his client had been provoked to carry out the attack by a Danish intelligence agent posing as a high-ranking member of the IS terror group.

The shooting shocked Norway, which has a relatively low crime rate but has experienced so-called lone wolf attacks in recent decades, including one of Europe’s worst mass shootings at the hands of a right-wing extremist in 2011.

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