THE sick ‘manifesto’ drawn up by Norwegian killer Anders Breivik included suggested terrorist attacks on Dorset targets, it has emerged.

He proposed sending a lethal dose of anthrax to 62,000 British ‘traitors’, including teachers, politicians, journalists – and singer and left-wing activist Billy Bragg, who lives at Burton Bradstock.

Breivik – who claims links with British right-wing extremists, including the English Defence League – is said to have completed his manifesto in London this year.

He published it online hours before detonating a lethal bomb in Oslo city centre and shooting dead dozens of young people at a Norwegian Labour Party youth camp. In the document, he suggests attacking nuclear power stations, refineries and oil rigs in the UK. Targets included the decommissioned nuclear power station site at Winfrith and Wytch Farm oilfield.

The manifesto refers to two other cells in his network, a claim now under investigation by Norwegian police.

At his first court appearance on Monday, the gunman told Judge Kim Heger his killing spree had been intended to deter future recruits to the Labour Party, which he blames for allowing ‘mass imports of Muslims’.

The manifesto, written under the anglicised pen name Andrew Berwick, also accuses our previous Labour government of dishonestly concealing plans to allow more immigrants into the UK.

London-born Breivik says he is one of 12 people in a revived group of Knights Templar who met in the City in 2002.