The deadly siege began in the most incongruous of ways, on a sunny Monday morning inside a cheerful cafe in the heart of Australia's largest city. An Iranian-born gunman burst in, took 17 people hostage, and forced some to hold a flag with an Islamic declaration of faith above the shop window's festive inscription of "Merry Christmas.
It ended after midnight with a barrage of gunfire that left two hostages
and the gunman dead, four others wounded, and a nation that has long
prided itself on its peace rocked to its core. After waiting 16 hours,
police stormed the Lindt Chocolat Cafe early Tuesday when they heard
gunfire inside, said New South Wales state police Commissioner Andrew
Scipione.
A loud bang rang out, several hostages ran from the building and
police swooped in amid heavy gunfire, shouts and flashes. A police bomb
disposal robot also was sent into the building, but no explosives were
found.
"They made the call because they believed that at
that time, if they didn't enter, there would have been many more lives
lost," Scipione said. The gunman was identified as 50-year-old Man Haron
Monis, who once was prosecuted for sending offensive letters to
families of Australian troops killed in Afghanistan.
Prime Minister Tony Abbott said Monis had "a long
history of violent crime, infatuation with extremism and mental
instability." Scipione wouldn't say whether the two hostages who were
killed — a 34-year-old man and a 38-year-old woman — were caught in
crossfire, or shot by their captor. Among the four wounded was a police
officer shot in the face.
One of the victims was Sydney lawyer and
mother-of-three Katrina Dawson. "Katrina was one of our best and
brightest barristers who will be greatly missed by her colleagues and
friends" Jane Needham, president of the New South Wales Bar Association,
said in a statement.
Officials rolled one gurney out of the cafe
carrying what appeared to be a man draped in a blood-soaked sheet with a
bloody handprint in the center. Paramedics also carried away a woman
with blood-covered feet.
"I can only imagine the terror that they've been
through," Scipione said. "They are very brave people who in many cases
were just buying a cup of coffee and they got caught up in this dreadful
affair. We should reflect on their courage."
The prime minister also reflected on how an
ordinary day turned terrifying. "There is nothing more Australian than
dropping in at the local cafe for a morning coffee, and it's tragic
beyond words that people going about their everyday business should have
been caught up in such a horrific incident," Abbott said.
While Monis' motivation for the attack was still
unclear, Abbott confirmed he was "well-known" to state and federal
authorities. Last year, he was convicted and sentenced to 300 hours of
community service for using the postal service to send what a judge
called "grossly offensive" letters to families of soldiers killed in
Afghanistan between 2007 and 2009.
At the time, Monis said his letters were "flowers
of advice," adding: "Always, I stand behind my beliefs." Monis later was
charged with being an accessory to the murder of his ex-wife. Earlier
this year, he was charged with the sexual assault of a woman in 2002. He
has been out on bail on the charges.
"He had a long history of violent crime,
infatuation with extremism and mental instability," Abbott said. "As the
siege unfolded yesterday, he sought to cloak his actions with the
symbolism of the ISIL death cult. Tragically, there are people in our
community ready to engage in politically motivated violence."
"This is a one-off random individual. It's not a
concerted terrorism event or act. It's a damaged-goods individual who's
done something outrageous," his former lawyer, Manny Conditsis, told
Australian Broadcasting Corp.
"His ideology is just so strong and so powerful
that it clouds his vision for common sense and objectiveness," Conditsis
said. Flags were lowered to half-staff on the landmark Harbour Bridge
as Australians awakened to the surreal conclusion of the crisis. The
state's premier expressed disbelief that the attack could happen in
Australia — a place he dubbed "a peaceful, harmonious society which is
the envy of the world."
"In the past 24 hours, this city has been shaken by
a tragedy that none of us could have ever imagined," Premier Mike Baird
said. "The values we held dear yesterday we hold dear today. They are
the values of freedom, democracy, and harmony. These defined us
yesterday, they will define us today, they will define us tomorrow."
The siege began about 9:45 a.m. in Martin Place, a
plaza in Sydney's financial and shopping district that was packed with
holiday shoppers. Many of those inside the cafe would have been taken
captive as they stopped in for their morning coffees.
Hundreds of police flooded the city. Streets were
closed and offices evacuated. The public was told to stay away from
Martin Place, site of the state premier's office, the Reserve Bank of
Australia, and the headquarters of two of the nation's largest banks.
The state parliament house is a few blocks away, and the famous Sydney
Opera House also is nearby.
Throughout the day, several hostages were seen with
their arms in the air and hands pressed against the window of the cafe,
with two people holding up a black flag with the Shahada, or Islamic
declaration of faith, written on it.
The Shahada, which translates as, "There is no god
but God and Muhammad is his messenger," is considered the first of
Islam's five pillars of faith. It is pervasive throughout Islamic
culture, including the green flag of Saudi Arabia. Jihadis have used the
Shahada in their own black flag.
Channel 10 news said it received a video in which a
hostage in the cafe had relayed the gunman's demands. The station said
police requested they not broadcast it, and Scipione separately asked
media that might be contacted by the gunman to urge him instead to talk
to police.
Australian Muslim groups condemned the
hostage-taking in a joint statement and said the flag's inscription was a
"testimony of faith that has been misappropriated by misguided
individuals." In a show of solidarity, many Australians offered on
Twitter to accompany people dressed in Muslim clothes who were afraid of
a backlash against the country's tiny Muslim minority of some 500,000
people in a nation of 24 million. The hashtag #IllRideWithYou was used
more than 90,000 times by late Monday evening.
Seven Network television news staff watched the
gunman and hostages for hours from a fourth floor window of their Sydney
offices, opposite the cafe. The gunman could be seen pacing back and
forth past the cafe's windows. Reporter Chris Reason said the man
carried what appeared to be a pump-action shotgun, was unshaven and wore
a white shirt and a black cap.
Some of the hostages were forced up against the
windows. "The gunman seems to be sort of rotating these people through
these positions on the windows with their hands and faces up against the
glass," Reason said in a report. "One woman we've counted was there for
at least two hours — an extraordinary, agonizing time for her, surely,
having to stand on her feet for that long."
"When we saw that rush of escapees, we could see
from up here in this vantage point the gunman got extremely agitated as
he realized those five had got out. He started screaming orders at the
people, the hostages who remain behind," he added.
Reason later reported that staff brought food from a
kitchen at the rear of the cafe and the hostages were fed. As night set
in, the lights inside the cafe were switched off. Armed police guarding
the area outside fitted their helmets with green-glowing night goggles.
"This is a very disturbing incident," Prime
Minister Tony Abbott said. "It is profoundly shocking that innocent
people should be held hostage by an armed person claiming political
motivation." Lindt issued a statement saying it was "profoundly saddened
and deeply affected about the death of innocent people."
"We are devastated by the loss of their lives and
that several others were wounded and had to experience such trauma,"
said the statement from the Swiss company Lindt & Sprugli. "Our
thoughts and feelings are with the victims and their families who have
been through an incredible ordeal, and we want to pay tribute to their
courage and bravery."
Australia's government raised the country's terror
warning level in September in response to the domestic threat posed by
supporters of the Islamic State group, also known as ISIL. Counterterror
law enforcement teams later conducted dozens of raids and made several
arrests in Australia's three largest cities — Melbourne, Sydney and
Brisbane. One man arrested during a series of raids in Sydney was
charged with conspiring with an Islamic State leader in Syria to behead a
random person in Sydney.
The Islamic State group, which holds a third of
Syria and Iraq, has threatened Australia in the past. In September, its
spokesman Abu Mohammed al-Adnani issued a message urging attacks abroad,
specifically mentioning Australia.
One terrorism expert said the situation appeared to
be that of a "lone wolf" making his own demands, rather than an attack
orchestrated by a foreign jihadist group. "There haven't been statements
from overseas linking this to extremist groups outside the country —
that is quite positive," said Charles Knight, lecturer in the Department
of Policing, Intelligence and Counter Terrorism at Australia's
Macquarie University. "The individual or individuals involved didn't
kill early, which is part of the pattern of some recent international
attacks. ... It seems to be shifting more into the model of a
traditional hostage situation, rather than the sort of brutal attacks
we've seen overseas."
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