Breivik's Solidarity Correspondence to Terrorists Mangs & Zschape & Brief History of Scandinavian Political Motivated Violence Testimony
Andrea Muhrrteyn | 04 June 2012 | VG & Wikipedia
Anders Behring Behring has written letters to both the Swedish terrorist Peter Mangs and alleged German Neo-Nazi Beate Zschäpe.
According to Sweden's Dagbladet, Breivik admire two terrorists who are accused of respectively three murders and twelve murders.
In police interviews he has referred to Mangs as "perhaps the greatest resistance fighter" in Scandinavia prior to 22 July.
Defender Odd Ivar Green confirmed the information to the newspaper, Dagbladet.
“Breivik has written a long letter to both the Mangs and Beate Zschäpe,” says Green.
In the letters Breivik notes his intention to show solidarity and moral support to their respective lawsuits.
VG: Breivik's letters to Terrorists
Anders Behring Behring has written letters to both the Swedish terrorist Peter Mangs and alleged German Neo-Nazi Beate Zschäpe.
According to Sweden's Dagbladet, Breivik admire two terrorists who are accused of respectively three murders and twelve murders.
In police interviews he has referred to Mango as "perhaps the greatest resistance fighter" in Scandinavia prior to 22 July.
Sent a letter far
Defender Odd Ivar Greenland confirmed the information to the newspaper, Dagbladet.
“Breivik has written a long letter to both the Mangs and Beate Zschäpe,” says Green.
In the letters Breivik notes his intention to show solidarity and moral support to their respective lawsuits.
Wikipedia: Beate Zschäpe and Germany's Doner Murders
The Bosphorus serial murders[2] also known as Döner murders, the term often used by the media,[3] were a series of murders that took place in Germany between 2000 and 2006, leaving ten people dead and one wounded. The perpetrators called themselves National Socialist Underground (NSU) (German: Nationalsozialistischer Untergrund).
The primary target of these right-wing extremist-oriented crimes were predominantly immigrants of Turkish origin and one person of Greek origin.
The victims were mostly small business owners (doner kebab vendors, grocers, locksmiths, alteration tailors, internet café) who were murdered in broad daylight by being shot in the face with a CZ 83. According to the parents of the Turkish victim who worked in an internet café, the police originally suspected foreign organised criminals. Furthermore, a German policewoman, Michéle Kiesewetter, was shot as well and her duty-partner was critically wounded. Other crimes, in particular a bomb attack, have allegedly been committed by the group.
The murderers, according to the acting Attorney General of Germany, Rainer Greisbaum.,[4] have Neo-Nazi links. The German authorities identified three suspects, Uwe Böhnhardt, Uwe Mundlos, and Beate Zschäpe as responsible for the murders and attempted murders. Böhnhardt and Mundlos were found dead by police after they robbed a bank on 4 November 2011. Police say they committed suicide.[5] Zschäpe turned herself in on 11 November 2011. She will probably face charges of murder, attempted murder, arson, and belonging to a terrorist organization. Zschäpe is only willing to testify if she is considered a state witness, with mitigation of sentence.[citation needed] The police had discovered a name list of 88 people later, that included "two prominent members of the Bundestag and representatives of Turkish and Islamic groups".[6]
Wikipedia: Peter Mangs & Sweden's Malmo Shootings
The Malmö shootings are a string of attacks by a suspected serial shooter in the southern Swedish city of Malmö. The shooter apparently targets people with dark skin and non-Swedish appearance. As of 23 October 2010, as many as 15 shootings were linked to the same suspect, whom the police had not yet been able to identify.[1][2] Comparisons have been made to the so-called "Laser man", who committed eleven shootings on people of immigrant origin in the Stockholm and Uppsala area in 1991–92, killing one.[2][3] The attacks, carried out with a large-caliber handgun, have been going on at least since December 2009. At the same time, the fatal shooting of a 20-year-old woman in October 2009 has also been linked to the same perpetrator.[4] The woman is the only ethnically Swedish victim,[5] though she was in the company of a friend of immigrant origin.[6] This murder has been linked to the other shootings through forensic evidence, showing that the weapon used was the same gun as the one used in several of the other attacks.[5]
Much like the similar shootings against immigrants in Stockholm after the 1991 general elections in Sweden, which saw the right-wing New Democracy enter Parliament, the Malmö shootings were preceded by the entrance of an anti-immigrant party into Parliament in the recent general election, the Sweden Democrats. Party leader Jimmie Åkesson condemned the shootings and referred to them as "very tragic". Norwegian terrorist Anders Behring Breivik supported the shootings, seeing them as the "most important act of courage before July 22".
On 6 November 2010, Swedish police announced that they had arrested a man they suspected was the shooter.[9] According to Malmö police he is now under suspicion of one murder and seven murder attempts.[10] The man arrested was a 38-year-old Swedish man, Peter Mangs.[11]
Breivik 04 June Court Testimony: Brief History of Scandinavian Political Motivated Violence Testimony
#Breivik: One thing that has not been elucidated, is whether it has been politically motivated violence in Norway. #22juli
— Serpico Savage (@Habeus_4_Mentem) June 4, 2012
#Breivik: - Most people were surprised when they found out that it was not Islamists who carried out 22 July. #22juli
— Serpico Savage (@Habeus_4_Mentem) June 4, 2012
#Breivik: I have no cases before 1977, but I'm sure it exists before it, too. It has been up to 40 attacks in Norway. #22juli
— Serpico Savage (@Habeus_4_Mentem) June 4, 2012
#Breivik: Some of them have been against leftists, others have been against immigrants. #22juli
— Serpico Savage (@Habeus_4_Mentem) June 4, 2012
#Breivik: I belong to the part that supports the attack on the elites and not the other part, but it is important to mention both. #22juli
— Serpico Savage (@Habeus_4_Mentem) June 4, 2012
#Breivik: total of seven killed in five bomb attacks; more than 1000 threats and attacks. In Sweden, the proportion is even higher. #22juli
— Serpico Savage (@Habeus_4_Mentem) June 4, 2012
#Breivik: - In October 1977 the bookshop in Tromsø blown up. Only by chance did that life was not lost. #22juli
— Serpico Savage (@Habeus_4_Mentem) June 4, 2012
#Breivik: - In 1979, neo-Nazis threw a bomb at 1 May train. #22juli
— Serpico Savage (@Habeus_4_Mentem) June 4, 2012
#Breivik: In 1981, members of the Home Guard started Youth Organization, the Norwegian Germanic army. #22juli
— Serpico Savage (@Habeus_4_Mentem) June 4, 2012
#Breivik: - In 1985, a Muslim school blown up with dynamite by the right-wing National Democratic Party. #22juli
— Serpico Savage (@Habeus_4_Mentem) June 4, 2012
#Breivik: - In 1988: An explosive charge detonated in an immigrant shop in Brumunddal. #22juli
— Serpico Savage (@Habeus_4_Mentem) June 4, 2012
#Breivik: In 1989, radical right threw firebombs at Blitz-house. #22juli
— Serpico Savage (@Habeus_4_Mentem) June 4, 2012
#Breivik: - 1994-1998 were left extremists in Oslo and Hønefoss shot at on several occasions. #22juli
— Serpico Savage (@Habeus_4_Mentem) June 4, 2012
#Breivik: - 1990: Arne Myrdal attempted - unsucessfully - to prevent Brumuddal became a "dumping ground" for immigrants. #22juli
— Serpico Savage (@Habeus_4_Mentem) June 4, 2012
#Breivik: One can not compare such small events with 22 July, but it confirms a right-wing tradition of violence to change system.#22juli
— Serpico Savage (@Habeus_4_Mentem) June 4, 2012
#Breivik: - There is an opposition to the multicultural experiment. It has been a tradition in Europe for violent actions. #22juli
— Serpico Savage (@Habeus_4_Mentem) June 4, 2012
#Breivik: In Italy, there was a major campaign in the 80's, where 88 people were killed. 22. July joins the ranks of this tradition. #22juli
— Serpico Savage (@Habeus_4_Mentem) June 4, 2012
Lippestad: The fact that you have referred to a number of violent incidents, what does it mean for you? #22juli #breivik
— Serpico Savage (@Habeus_4_Mentem) June 4, 2012
#Breivik: - I think it has great significance. Although many of these attacks have been pathetic and wretched... #22juli
— Serpico Savage (@Habeus_4_Mentem) June 4, 2012
#Breivik: ... I look at some of the people behind them as heroes. They have sacrificed their lives, even if action was not so great. #22juli
— Serpico Savage (@Habeus_4_Mentem) June 4, 2012
#Breivik: Knowledge that there has been a resistance movement, non-stop since the war, provides motivation to continue the fight #22juli
— Serpico Savage (@Habeus_4_Mentem) June 4, 2012
» » » » [VG :: Wikipedia: Beate Zschape :: Wikipedia: Peter Mangs]
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