Anders Behring Breivik evokes Enoch Powell as he justifies attack

“Yes, I would have done it again,” he said. “These were not
innocent, non-political children, but these were people who actively worked
to uphold multi-cultural values.

“The youth wing is in many ways similar to the Hitler Youth. It’s an
indoctrination camp at Utoya.”

Breivik compared himself to other racist serial killers in Europe, such as
Peter Mangs, the Malmo serial killer who in 2010 picked off immigrants with
a sniper rifle, and Germany’s NSU group, who killed more than 10 immigrants
over the last decade.

“It is important that more patriots in Europe assume responsibility like
I did, and men like Peter Mangs in Malmo did,” he said. “They are
all perfect foot soldiers …. for nationalist rebirth. Europe needs more
great heroes like them.”

The killer argued that since the Second World War, democracy in Europe had
been stifled by a conspiracy of Liberal and Marxists, who “feared that
new Hitlers would pop up and cause the Third World War”.

As a result, they had allowed Europe to be overrun by Islamic immigrants who
had no interest in integration and would soon become a majority, forcing his “preventive
attacks to defend Norway’s culture”.

“I cannot plead guilty,” said. “I acted in defence of my
culture and of my people, and so I ask to be acquitted.”

He said the teenagers on Utoya should take some of the blame for the 19,000
Norwegian women he claimed had been raped by Muslims in recent years.

Breivik said he did not fear prison, as he believed he was already in one.

“This prison is called Norway,” he said. “It doesn’t matter if
I am locked into a cell at Ila. because you know that all areas will end up
in “a multicultural Hell” that we call Oslo.

Judge Wenche Arntzen interrupted Breivik four times as his speech began to run
beyond the half-hour allotted, suggesting he leave out inessential passages.

“It’s all relevant,” Breivik to retorted. “I’ve never asked for
five days,” he said. “The only thing I’ve asked for is one hour,
and that is the hour I’m sitting in now. It’s critically important that I
can explain my motives.”

“I would like to add that I have lowered the rhetoric out of
consideration for the victims,” he said as he began the statement.

This afternoon, Breivik will face questions on his motives from the defence
and the prosecution lawyers.

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