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Sydney siege: Police confirm hostage situation is now over

Hostages released by police
Hostages released by police

The Sydney cafe siege has ended after armed police stormed the building amid the sound of gunfire.

The police operation was launched as five more hostages fled the cafe, more than 16 hours after the siege began.

They ran from the building with their arms aloft just after 2am local time.

Armed police and medics entered the building soon afterwards and five people were seen being taken away on stretchers.

Police bring an end to the Sydney siege
Police bring an end to the Sydney siege

New South Wales Police confirmed development in a Tweet: “Sydney siege is over. More details to follow.”

Several more hostages fled the scene of the Sydney cafe siege amid the sound of gunfire and loud explosions.

They ran from the building with their arms aloft just after 2am local time as police entered.

One hostage could be seen being carried from the building by armed officers with blood on her bare feet.

The ABC reported a number of people were rushed to waiting ambulances, though it is not clear what injuries they suffered, if any.

Police bring an end to the Sydney siege
Police bring an end to the Sydney siege

Bomb disposal officers in protective gear were also seen entering the building and a bomb disposal robot was deployed.

It was not immediately clear what prompted the latest hostages to flee and the police to move in.

Earlier Chris Reason, a senior journalist at Seven News, which has its main Sydney newsroom across the plaza from the Lindt Chocolat Cafe, said he believed he could see the man inside carrying a pump-action shotgun.

Five people fled earlier in the hostage crisis, which began during morning rush hour.

The first three ran out of the cafe in Martin Place six hours into the crisis and two women sprinted from a fire exit into the arms of waiting police shortly afterwards. Both women were wearing aprons with the Lindt chocolate logo, indicating they were cafe employees.

Earlier, two people – apparently hostages – held up a flag at the cafe window with an Islamic declaration of faith on it.

Sheikh Man Haron Monis
Sheikh Man Haron Monis

A message apparently sent by Monis in October to members of the Muslim community and published on his personal website voiced support for non-violent activism.

“Islam is the religion of peace and a Muslim should be a peace activist,” Monis wrote in a letter he signed “Sheikh Haron”.

“Islam is against oppression and any unfair violence. Islam is against terrorism. As I have repeatedly said earlier: ’this pen is my gun and these words are my bullets, I fight by these weapons against oppression to promote peace’.”

The website was this afternoon suspended.

The development came soon after the hostage taker was named as Muslim cleric Man Haron Monis, who recently attracted attention by writing offensive letters to the families of Australian soldiers killed in Afghanistan.

He was also banned in 2010 from writing similar “letters of condolence” to British soldiers killed in that conflict.

It is believed Monis is out on bail after he was arrested earlier this year over sexual assault allegations stemming from 2002.