BBC News with Gaenor Howells
Norwegians have attended church services across the country to remember the
nearly
100 people killed in the shootings and bomb attack on Friday. The main service attended by the royal family and political leaders took place in Oslo cathedral. From Oslo, James Robbins reports.
Oslo's 17th Century cathedral was filled with families of the dead and those still missing. Outside, thousands more people crowded around the church. King Harald of Norway led this first opportunity for the nation to come together and confront the scale of collective grief. Norway's Prime Minister Jens Stoltenberg in his address said several times he found the horror of the past few days "
incomprehensible
".
As the day
drew to a close
, Norwegians continued to pay their tribute to the dead, adding to the carpet of flowers outside the cathedral.
Anders Behring Breivik shot dead at least 86 people at an island camp site near Oslo, though at least five others remain missing, and a mini-submarine is searching for them. Seven people died in the car bombing in Oslo. Police, who have charged Mr Breivik with both crimes, say he has told them he acted alone. Jon Brain reports on what the Norwegian authorities have been finding out about the gunman.
Just hours before the attack, Breivik posted a
manifesto
online, an often
rambling
1,500-page document which talks of creating the