BBC News with Zoe Diamond
Norway is a country in mourning a day after at least 92 people, many teenagers, were killed in a shooting
spree
and bomb attack. Police have charged a 32-year-old Norwegian man, Anders Behring Breivik. He's been questioned about the deaths of seven people in a bombing in Oslo and at least 85 others shot dead at a youth camp on an island. Richard Galpin reports from near the island.
Norway is coming to terms with the worst spate of killings it's suffered since the Second World War. And the survivors who've now been brought off the island have been describing what happened when the gunman
disguise
d as a police officer opened fire on the crowds of teenagers attending a summer camp organised by the governing Labour Party. Lisa Marie Husby was one of many who had a narrow escape,
managing to
hide in a cabin after being chased by the gunman.
"Everybody that I took with me was safe. But three of them changed their minds on their way and ran back to the main building, and they're missing now. I haven't seen them, and I haven't heard from them. So they are
probably
dead. I don't know. Everybody outside the main building was shot."
Many survivors have talked about the long wait for the police to rescue them. It's now been confirmed that the gunman's killing spree continued for an hour and a half.
In Oslo, where the army is patrolling the streets, flags are lowered and people have streamed to the cathedral to light candles and lay flowers. The man arrested, Anders Behring Breivik, described himself as a Christian and a conservative. In the latest international condemnation of the attacks, the UN Security Council has said terrorism in all its forms is one of the most serious threats to world peace.