Days after launching 'Operation UnManifest' to turn Anders Behring Breivik's 1516-page long anti-Islamist manifesto into a joke, Anonymous has attacked the Norwegian terrorist again. This time the clandestine hacker group has hijacked Breivik's Twitter account.
The account, @AndersBBreivik, believed to belong to Norwegian killer but yet not confirmed, was hacked at around 3:00 p.m (EDT) Sunday when the hackers sent two prison rape jokes under Breivik's name.
Initially it appeared that Breivik himself was sending tweets from the prison, but soon the hacker group claimed responsibility, tweeting, This Twitter account has been seized by #NORIA @AnonymousNorway.
As of Aug. 1, 7:00 a.m. EDT, Breivik's Twitter account still exits but all the tweets have been deleted. Currently, the message in account's timeline states, @AndersBBreivik hasn't tweeted yet.
From 'joke' to 'nothing'
After calling upon the internet users to worldwide to hack into Breivik's 'European Declaration of Independence' and modify it with mocking versions until Anders become a joke, such that nobody will take him serious anymore, Anonymous now wants people to completely forget Breivik.
We want Anders to be forgotten. Labels like monster or maniac won't do either. Media should call him pathetic, a nothing. #Forgethim, read one message on Breivik's Twitter page.
Shortly after that another tweet read, This twitter account will be deleted soon. Forget Anders. #NOIRA
As of Aug. 1, 7:00 a.m. EDT, Breivik's Twitter account still exits but all the tweets have been deleted. Currently, the message in account's timeline states, @AndersBBreivik hasn't tweeted yet.
The account, with 3291 followers, was created few days before the Oslo attacks on July 22.
Breivik's trial pending
The 32-year-old Norwegian fanatic, who spent years plotting the attack, has been held in solitary confinement in a prison, renamed Ila, near Oslo.
This prison was Nazi concentration camp where detainees were tortured and executed.
Breivik's trail is pending, and decision about his mental state will determine whether he should be punished with a prison sentence or treated in a psychiatric ward.
If Breivik is found sane, and convicted, he may face to 21 years in prison for the killing spree.
The court has selected two Norwegian psychiatrists to complete evaluating Breivik by Nov. 1, and submit their report to forensic board for review and approval before it goes to the judge hearing the case.