BBC News with Sue Montgomery
Police in Norway have begun releasing the names of the 76 people killed in Friday's bomb attack in Oslo and mass shooting on a nearby island. Earlier, the lawyer for the man who's admitted carrying out the attacks, Anders Behring Breivik, expressed doubts about his client's mental health. From Oslo, Stephen Evans.
The lawyer said his client was probably
insane
, though it wasn't certain that insanity would be his formal plea. He said his client regarded himself as taking part in a war. Breivik is now likely to be charged with an offence related to terrorism, which will enable the court to impose a longer sentence than the current maximum for murder. The head of the country's intelligence service told the BBC they were also investigating links to other groups and whether Breivik may have left unexploded bombs elsewhere.
President Obama has made an unannounced visit to the Norwegian ambassador's residence in Washington to pay his
condolence
s over the killings in Norway. The president wrote in a condolences book that he was heartbroken at the tragic loss of so many young lives.
The Moroccan army says 78 people were killed when a military transport plane crashed into a mountain in the south of the country, just north of the disputed Western Sahara territory. Here's Norah Fahim in Rabat.
The Hercules C-130 crashed this morning into a mountain near the town Guelmim, in the south of Morocco. According to Morocco's official news agency, the MAP, the plane was carrying 81 people and only three have survived. The plane came from Dakhla and was heading towards Kinitra, a town right outside Morocco's capital Rabat. Some of the soldiers on board were due to meet King Mohammed this Saturday to celebrate his 12th year as king.