"I will take everything that matters, that is valuable, I will destroy the country. Just listen! …. I can attack anywhere. …. Airplane, airport, railway station, nothing is a problem for me. ….” The man released recordings in which he explained that he wanted to overcome the 2011 crime committed by Anders Behring Breivik, which left 77 dead.
Last week, the operations unit of the Anti-Terrorist Center (TEK) arrested a Norwegian man living in Budapest who was preparing to commit a terrorist act, the National Investigation Bureau of the Emergency Police (KR NNI) announced on the police's website on Tuesday.
According to the information, the KR NNI was notified by TEK that the 45-year-old man had recently published several videos on a video-sharing portal, according to which he was planning to kill people. The employees of the KR NNI Investigation Department immediately started analyzing the recordings, identifying the man on them, and obtaining all the information related to the crime he was planning - they wrote.
The man spoke mainly in Norwegian in the recordings, but in some videos he threatened in English. The man published recordings in which he explained that in 2011, carried out by Anders Behring Breivik,
He wants to surpass a crime involving 77 deaths.
"I will take everything that matters, that is valuable, I will destroy the country. Just listen! …. I can attack anywhere. …. Airplane, airport, railway station, nothing is a problem for me. ….
I will destroy the innocent”
said the Norwegian man in his videos.
During the data collection, the investigators also contacted the Norwegian police, and based on their verbal information, it was revealed that the man had been convicted several times in his country for various violent and sexual crimes, they explained.
The man was arrested last Wednesday in his Budapest apartment. The police conducted a search of the apartment and seized all computer equipment.
The man is suspected of committing a terrorist act. Last Saturday, the court ordered his arrest, which must be carried out in the Judicial Monitoring and Psychiatric Institute (IMEI), according to police.hu .
MTI / Mandiner / Police.hu
Cover image: Illustration / Photo: MTI/Zoltán Mihádák