Anders Breivik called the police from the Utoeya island, saying “Mission accomplished”

“Breivik. Commander. Engaged in resistance against anti-Islamization. Mission accomplished and I will surrender to Delta Force,” are the words of Anders Breivik Behring when he announced the police that he committed a massacre, reported Wednesday the Norwegian daily newspaper Verdens Gang.

After he  opened fire at a meeting of the Norwegian Labour Youth on the Utoeya island, killing 69 people, the Norwegian extremist Anders Behring Breivik, aged 32, called the police emergency number 112 and only said a few words.

The call did not last more than three seconds, added the publication, stating that subsequent attempts of the police to contact the author failed.

“We received a call from Breivik’s phone, but we have no confirmation that he called”, said Henning Holtaas, a police spokesman in Oslo.
“We can not confirm what it was said”, he added.

According to Verdengs Gang, the police did not find Breivik’s mobile phone on the island, but Holtaas would not comment any such information.

On July 22, about an hour passed between the first messages of people on the island Utoeya who alerted the police about the armed attack and the arrest of Breivik by a special intervention force – called Delta – sent from Oslo, located about 35 miles away.

An hour and a half before the outbreak of the armed attack on the island by Behring Breivik, presenting himself as a “crusader” at war against Islam and multiculturalism in Europe, a car bomb exploded near the government headquarters in Norway, killing eight people.