In his manifesto, Norwegian attacker Anders Behring Breivik writes that he had acquired around 8,000 e-mail addresses of ‘cultural conservatives’ in many countries, including India and Israel.
According to the Christian Science Monitor, his manifesto invites the possibility for cooperation with Jewish groups in Israel, Buddhists in China, and Hindu nationalist groups in India to contain spread of Islam.
"It is essential that the European and Indian resistance movements learn from each other and cooperate as much as possible. Our goals are more or less identical," he wrote.
The document is titled "2083: A European Declaration of Independence". It is a date which Breivik believes that an European civil war will end with the execution of cultural Marxists and the deportation of Muslims.
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Anders Behring Breivik, an anti-Muslim, right-wing fundamentalist, detonated a bomb in Oslo and open fired at a Youth camp of the ruling political party, killing at least 92 people.
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The manifesto:
In the 1,500-page, Anders Behring expresses his extreme anti-Muslim political views and describes the attacks which are to be carried out.
He vows that a "European civil war" will lead to the execution of "cultural Marxists" and the banishing of Muslims, reported CNN.
He calls for preserving the traditional European culture by stopping immigrations from Muslim countries. It outlines his desire for the revival of Christendom, where the church helps unify Europeans around a shared cultural identity.
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References to India in the manifesto:
India has been mentioned about dozen times in the document. A five-page paper, in which the author, Shrinandan Vyas, argues that the Muslim invaders committed a ‘genocide’ of Hindus in the Kush region of present-day Afghanistan, is included in the manifesto.
The complete extent of his connection with India is not yet clear. He counts himself among the 12 ‘knights’ fighting within regions in US and Europe; however, there is no mention of India.
According to CSM, officials in India’s Home Ministry would not comment on whether they are tracking down Breivik’s e-mails to India.
The Monitor quotes sources within India who have revealed that India does not have the capacity to do those traces easily until Norway provides information from Breivik’s computers.
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