Police in
SWAT-style gear hurled percussion grenades and opened fire, unleashing a flurry
of loud bangs and flashes in the eatery in the heart of Australia’s biggest
city, after a number of the staff and customers managed to flee for their
lives.
A man,
aged 34, and a woman, 38, were also pronounced dead after being taken to
hospital.
“It was
the act of an individual. This should never destroy or change the way of our
life,” Scipione said.
Channel
Seven reporter Chris Reason, whose office is opposite the cafe, said a call
came from police communications that there was a “hostage down”, prompting
officers to storm the building without warning.
An AFP
photographer saw one body carried out.
Royal
North Shore Hospital had admitted a 39-year-old policeman with a gunshot graze
to his cheek, a woman in her 40s in a serious but stable condition with a
gunshot wound to her leg, and a woman suffering from backpain, a spokeswoman
told AFP.
A bomb
robot was sent into the building as police declared the siege over and medics
tended to hostages but no explosives were found.
The
hostagetaker, who earlier had unfurled an Islamic flag, was named by ABC
television and other media as a 49-year-old Iranian-born “cleric” called Man
Haron Monis.
They
published a photo of him sporting a beard and a white turban and said he was on
bail for a series of violent offences.
The preChristmas
siege of the Lindt chocolate cafe began Monday morning and triggered a massive
security lockdown in Sydney’s bustling financial district as hundreds of police
surrounded the site.
– ‘A
damaged-goods individual’ –
Monis’s
former lawyer Manny Conditsis said the public could be assured that the siege
was not the work of an organised terrorist group.
“This is
a one-off random individual,” he told broadcaster ABC. “It’s not a concerted
terrorism event or act. It’s a damagedgoods individual who’s done something
outrageous.”
The
Australian newspaper called Monis a “selfstyled sheikh” who had sent offensive
letters to the families of dead soldiers and was on bail on charges of being an
accessory to the murder of his ex-wife.
It said
he arrived in Australia as a refugee in 1996, lived in Sydney’s southwest and
was “understood to be a fringe Islamist”.
Police
declined to identity the gunman but would not deny reports naming him as Man
Haron Monis.
Tehran
swiftly condemned the hostage-taking by the Iranian-born gunman.
The
Australian government said earlier there was no clear motivation. But the
Islamic flag appeared to be one commonly used by jihadist groups bearing the
shahada, or profession of faith in Arabic script “There is no God but Allah;
Mohammed is his messenger.”
The
gunman made a series of demands through Australian media but they were removed
after police requested they not be made public.
Australia
has been on high alert with the government raising concerns that citizens who
have fought alongside Sunni jihadists in Iraq and Syria could return home
radicalised and carry out “lone wolf” attacks.
Prime
Minister Tony Abbott convened a national security meeting to deal with the
“disturbing” development.
Some six
hours into the siege, three men emerged from the cafe and ran for their lives.
Around an hour later two distraught women employees also fled, and then several
more people managed to run out late in the night.
One of
the escapees was barista Elly Chen whose sister Nicole said on Facebook:
“Yessss I finally see you. I’m so glad you’re safe!!!!”
– ‘Gunman
rotating hostages’
Channel
Seven’s Reason tweeted earlier: “We can see gunman is rotating hostages,
forcing them to stand against windows, sometimes 2 hours at a time.”
The scene
of the drama, Martin Place, is Sydney’s financial centre and houses several
prominent buildings, including the New South Wales parliament, the US
consulate, the country’s central bank and the Commonwealth Bank of Australia.
Many
shops and offices in the area shut early due to the scare, with only a trickle
of people walking along usually bustling streets.
At the
nearby Sydney Opera House, which police had swept earlier Monday, evening
performances were cancelled.
“It’s sad
to think this is my home and that it could happen anywhere,” said onlooker
Rebecca Courtney.
More than
40 Australian Muslim groups jointly condemned the hostage taking and the use of
the flag, which they said had been hijacked by “misguided individuals that
represent no one but themselves”.
The
government in September raised its terror threat level and police conducted
largescale counterterror raids across the country. Only two people were
charged.
More than
70 Australians are believed to be fighting for Islamic militants in Iraq and
Syria. At least 20 have died
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