Excerpts and pictures taken from several articles.
First one's my favorite of the two:
Breivik's father: I wish my son killed himself
The father of Anders Behring Breivik, the Norwegian who confessed to last Friday's twin terror attacks, said he was ashamed and disgusted by his son's acts and wished he had committed suicide.
Jens David Breivik, a former diplomat who lives in retirement in the south of France, said he first learned of his son's attacks from media websites.
"I couldn't believe my eyes. It was totally paralyzing and I couldn't really understand it," he said.
Breivik's parents divorced in 1980, and his father lived in London while he and his mother lived in Oslo.
In an interview with the Swedish tabloid Expressen, Breivik said he and his son have had virtually no contact with one another since 1995 (when Anders was 16), except for a "bland" phone call about 10 years ago.
"I don't feel like his father," said Breivik from his secluded home in southern France. "How could he just stand there and kill so many innocent people and just seem to think that what he did was OK? He should have taken his own life, too. That's what he should have done."
"I will have to live with this shame for the rest of my life. People will always link me with him," he said.
When asked what he would say to his son if he had the opportunity, Jens Breivik said he didn't know, and didn't know if Anders would listen. "He must live in another world; I do not think he would understand."
He added that his son should consider the sorrow and suffering he has caused. "He has ruined so many lives. He must think of the consequences," Jens Breivik said.
On Monday police surrounded the elder Breivik's house in the south of France, to ensure the safety of Breivik after reporters and photographers swarmed to his property.
Norway suspect to judge: 2 other cells out there
OSLO - The man who has confessed to carrying out a bombing and shooting spree that left scores dead in Norway will be held in complete isolation for four weeks after a hearing in which he said his terror network had two other cells.
Anders Behring Breivik pleaded not guilty to one of the deadliest modern mass killings in peacetime, saying he wanted to "save" Europe from the spread of Marxism, multiculturalism and Islamic immigration.
At today's closed hearing Breivik plead not guilty to terror charges over last Friday's twin attacks.
The death toll from the shooting on Utoya island was lowered by Norwegian police Monday morning, from 86 to 68. Police also raised the number of those killed by the bomb blast in Oslo from seven to eight, making the current death toll 76.
At a post-hearing press conference, Judge Kim Heger said the suspect in the bombing of a government office building in Oslo and a youth camp sponsored by the nation's ruling Labour Party explained that he wanted to "induce the greatest possible loss" against the party for its acts of "treason," to prevent further recruitment by the party.
The judge said Breivik claimed to want to send out a "sharp signal" against the ruling Labour Party, and quoted the suspect as saying the party "had to pay price of treason" for the "mass import" of Muslims out to colonize the country.
Judge Heger also said police are investigating Breivik's claim that there are two more cells in his organization.
Heger ordered Breivik held for eight weeks, with four weeks to be spent in solitary confinement allowing no contact with others, including family, to prevent the destruction of evidence.
The judge ordered the hearing closed to the public and press, after Breivik had made clear in an Internet manifesto that he planned to turn his court appearance into theater, Breivik prepared a speech for his appearance in court even before launching the attacks, then requested an open hearing in which he would wear a uniform.
The suspect staged the bombing and youth camp rampage as "marketing" for his manifesto calling for a revolution that would rid Europe of Muslims, he said.
Norwegian broadcaster NRK states that one reason the hearing was closed to media and the public was to prevent possible "coded messages" being broadcast to any Breivik accomplice. Although the suspect appears to be the lone assailant and has confessed to the attacks, police are still investigating the possibility that others were involved.
"It is clear that there is concrete information that a public hearing with the suspect present could quickly lead to an extraordinary and very difficult situation in terms of the investigation and security," Heger said.
Reporters and locals thronged the courthouse on Monday ahead of the hearing for their first glimpse of Breivik since the assault. When one car drove through the crowd, people hit its windows and one person shouted an expletive, believing Breivik was inside.
The hearing ended after about 35 minutes.
The court acknowledged that there was a need for transparency in the case and that it normally would consider arguments from the press when making decisions to close hearings but said that wasn't possible "for practical reasons."
Breivik claims in his writing to be part of a new Knights Templar group, and he hints that there may be others waiting to execute similar attacks, though his lawyer said he insists he acted alone.
"Will attempt to initiate contact with cell 8b and 8c in late March," he writes at one point, but doesn't reference them again or explain if these are aliases.