Letters from prison to survivors and families of the victims of the Utoya massacre.

To write the author of the massacre, the man who on 22 July 2011 was responsible for two terrorist attacks, one in Oslo and one on the island of Utoya, killing 77 people.

The Norwegian far-right terrorist Anders Behring Breivik, sentenced to at least 20 years in prison as the sole responsible for the massacres and essentially sane, as the leader of the Committee for the support of survivors Lisbeth Royneland has announced, continues to persecute the survivors and the families of the victims by sending them letters from prison where he threatens them and takes up the contents of the manifesto released before the attacks, against migrants, Muslims and Labor and for the "white power".

Royneland, who lost her daughter in the massacre, called it "unacceptable" that the killer could afford to send such messages and asked that action be taken.

For the director of the Norwegian Institute for Human Rights Vidar Stromme, "it is important that we can enjoy freedom of expression even in prison. It is a fundamental principle but in high-security prisons I believe it should be limited if it represents an incitement to violence or a danger to the safety or safety of others ".

Norwegian law already provides that you can get a restraining order on correspondence if you use it to offend or persecute other people.

"He wants us to know that he is there and continue to scare us - says Lisbeth Royneland -: I expect the authorities to reconsider the case and see what can be done to stop him. And to get in touch with the affected people who are on the address list of the terrorist".

(Unioneonline / D)

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