The Norwegian mentions Brazil several times in his manifesto.
"A country with competing cultures will either tear itself apart or end up as a dysfunctional country, like Brazil," wrote the man who killed 76 people in Oslo.
247 - Brazil is mentioned at least 12 times in the lengthy manifesto written by the Norwegian shooter, Anders Behring Breivik. Written in English, "An European Declaration of Independence - 2083" has 1,500 pages.
In the text he says: "The reason for our concern and opposition (to miscegenation) is due to the fact that mass immigration, racial mixing and adoption by non-Europeans are a threat to the unity of our tribe (...). Firstly, a country that has competing cultures will tear itself apart or end up as a dysfunctional country, like Brazil and other countries."
According to the Norwegian man who killed 76 people last Friday, this social inequality is responsible for corruption and high crime rates in countries like Brazil.
In another passage, the country appears in the section on the manufacture of explosives and precautions in handling radioactive materials. It cites the accident that occurred in Goiânia in the 80s, better known as the Cesium-137 accident.
Brazil is once again used as an example in the manifesto when the shooter speaks of the use of coups to seize power in some countries, saying: "in 1889 Brazil became a republic after a coup d'état".
On the remaining pages, the 32-year-old man explains how to assemble bombs and delivers a speech against Islam and Marxism. The attack in Oslo was also described in detail in the document.