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[交流]
Norway had “lost a kind of innocence”...(extract from CNN July 24.2011)
Norway wakes changed after nightmare
By Mark Tutton, for CNNJuly 24, 2011 7:07 p.m. EDT
(CNN) -- For Norwegians still in shock from Friday's horrific attacks, there is a sense they have woken up in a country that has "lost its innocence."
With a population of 4.7 million concentrated in the south, Norway's people pride themselves on their progressive, open society -- which has made the bombing and shootings all the more the incomprehensible to them.
Jon Magnus, chief correspondent on the foreign desk at Oslo newspaper VG, was working at the paper's offices on Friday when he was thrown off his chair by the force of the bomb blast.
"I have covered wars and terror attacks around the world for the last 30 years and now it has come to Norway," he said. "We've been so lucky in this part of the world -- it happened every other place, but not here, and now it has happened."
He added: "This morning there were three young girls riding the bus and they were all crying and there were old people talking about how their lives had changed yesterday.
"It's a national trauma in a way. In Oslo people are quiet, whispering -- it's a different country."
Norway -- on the far northern edge of Europe and partly in the Arctic Circle -- has twice rejected joining the European Union in referenda.
But it is by no means insular. A founding member of the U.N., it has, in recent years, become increasingly active on the international stage, with Norwegian troops joining NATO forces in Afghanistan and taking part in NATO operations in Libya.
Siri Gulestad, head of clinical psychology at the University of Oslo, said Norway had "lost a kind of innocence."
She said another aspect of Norway's open, tolerant society is illustrated by the fact that Norwegian police do not carry guns.
She doesn't believe Norwegians will respond to the attacks by calling for police to be armed or by calling for tighter security measures.
"The scary thing is we were kind of expecting some kind of international organization doing this but it turns out to be an ethnic white lunatic born and raised in Norway, which means a lot of people are going to see spooks in the middle of the day from now on," said Magnus.
"There might be more suspicion in Norwegian society after this," he added.
"Things may go back to normal after a few months but it has changed us. "I think people will maybe be a little more scared, maybe look over their shoulders, maybe some will try to avoid tunnels and subways, at least for a while. This will definitely change our behavior."
"In a sense we all say now we will not let it destroy our open society," she said. "Our prime minister says that and I really think that's a wise and good way of expressing how we want to protect what we value so much."
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