When the right-wing extremist assassin Anders Behring Breivik could finally be arrested, he had murdered 77 people.

Eight people died in the car bomb explosion in Oslo.

69 people, most of them children and young people gathered for summer camp, were murdered on Utøya.

They were handled ice-cold and methodically.

One by one.

Many more have been seriously injured and traumatized.

Ten years have passed.

SVT's Carina Bergfeldt then reported from Norway for her then employer Aftonbladet. She was one of the first reporters on site and she lived for two days with surviving and desperate parents waiting to be told about their missing children. She later reported from the extensive and shocking trial where the perpetrator's ruthlessness became clear in his disgust. But Carina Bergfeldt's reporting first and foremost gave voice to the survivors' testimonies of death anxiety, pain and grief.

This year, Carina Bergfeldt, together with photographer Linda Hörnqvist, returned to meet some of those who survived the attack and their relatives.

The result is the documentary "Utøya - never forget, never keep quiet".

It does not touch through dramatic effects or strong emotional outbursts.

It touches through its everyday tone where those who were there, on Utøya on July 22, 2011, tell about the incredible.

Hearing the voices of these hard-hit people turns into a victory for decency, compassion and perseverance.

There is the unending hope despite the encounter with cruelty and barbarism.