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2 hostages say they plotted to stab gunman in Sydney siege

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AP Canberra
Two staff members of a Sydney cafe revealed in interviews broadcast today how they plotted to stab a gunman who held them hostage during a 16-hour siege in December, while two others told how they escaped the ordeal.

Joel Herat, 21, and Jarrod Morton-Hoffman, 19, said in paid interviews broadcast by Nine Network television that they armed themselves with box cutters after gunman Man Horan Monis took them and 16 other people hostage in the Lindt Cafe in downtown Sydney.

"I've got this knife in my pocket and I know Joel has a knife in his pocket and we are so close, we can do this," Morton-Hoffman said.
 

Morton-Hoffman said if someone had jumped Monis and pinned his arms, "I would stab him in the jugular" artery in neck.

"But he had his gun. He had it on his knee and I could see that it was pointed directly at Julie Taylor," a pregnant hostage, Morton-Hoffman said.

Herat said he contemplated stabbing Monis as Herat was forced to stand holding an Islamic flag against a cafe window.

Herat said: "He was right below me sitting on the lounge and (I thought) do I stab him? What if I miss? What are the consequences of that, you know, who's he going to shoot?"

Meanwhile, cafe staffers Bae Jie-un, 20, who was on her first day back at work after a vacation when the siege began, and Elly Chen, 22, who had been employed for less than a week, told Seven Network TV in paid interviews how Bae quietly opened an internal door to enable both to escape the cafe without Monis noticing.

"I would have felt guilty if I ran out by myself with someone right next to me," Bae said of Chen. "I had to get her out there with me. I told her it's a now-or-never type of situation."

Bae said she found it difficult to look at the iconic images of her clutching the arm of a police officer as she ran from the cafe with Chen behind her.

"I really don't like this photo," Bae said when shown the image. "I just look terrified."

The cafe's 34-year-old manager, Tori Johnson, was killed after Monis forced him to kneel on the floor and then fired a cartridge to the back of his head with a sawed-off shotgun after a second group of hostages escaped, a coroner's court was told last month.

Police then stormed the cafe, fatally shooting Monis and accidentally killing Katrina Dawson, a 38-year-old lawyer, with bullet fragments that that had ricocheted.

Morton-Hoffman said Monis warned the hostages that if they escaped, they would be responsible for the deaths of other hostages he would kill in retaliation.

Monis, a 50-year-old Iranian-born, self-styled cleric with a long criminal history, took the customers and workers captive and forced them to outline his demands in a series of online videos-- including that he be permitted to speak to Australia's prime minister and be delivered a flag of the Islamic State group, the coroner was told.

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First Published: Feb 08 2015 | 9:30 PM IST

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