Workers board up the Lindt Chocolat Cafe, where an armed gunman held 17 people hostage last week. (Associated Press)
Sydney:
Two victims of a deadly siege in Sydney were being remembered on Tuesday at private memorial services, one week after a gunman took them hostage inside a downtown cafe.
The memorial for Tori Johnson was held at a church just around the corner from the Lindt Chocolat Cafe, where he and 17 others were taken hostage on Dec. 15 by a shotgun-wielding Man Haron Monis, a 50-year-old Iranian-born, self-styled cleric with a long criminal history.
The standoff ended 16 hours later when police stormed the cafe in a barrage of gunfire to free the captives. Johnson, the cafe's 34-year-old manager, and 38-year-old lawyer Katrina Dawson were killed, along with Monis.
Johnson's partner of 14 years, Thomas Zinn, and father, Ken Johnson, helped to carry the white coffin into St. Stephen's Uniting Church for the service.
Dawson's memorial was scheduled for later Tuesday.
Volunteers, meanwhile, removed thousands of bouquets of flowers mourners have left near the cafe over the past week, ahead of predicted rainy weather. The flowers will be turned into mulch that officials hope to use at a permanent memorial site, while cards and letters left to honor Johnson and Dawson will be preserved in memory books for their families.
The permanent memorial will be set up after officials consult with the families, New South Wales Premier Mike Baird said.
The memorial for Tori Johnson was held at a church just around the corner from the Lindt Chocolat Cafe, where he and 17 others were taken hostage on Dec. 15 by a shotgun-wielding Man Haron Monis, a 50-year-old Iranian-born, self-styled cleric with a long criminal history.
The standoff ended 16 hours later when police stormed the cafe in a barrage of gunfire to free the captives. Johnson, the cafe's 34-year-old manager, and 38-year-old lawyer Katrina Dawson were killed, along with Monis.
Johnson has since been lauded for his heroism, after unconfirmed reports emerged that he tried to wrestle the shotgun away from Monis, sacrificing his life and allowing several of his fellow hostages to escape before police moved in.
Johnson's partner of 14 years, Thomas Zinn, and father, Ken Johnson, helped to carry the white coffin into St. Stephen's Uniting Church for the service.
Dawson's memorial was scheduled for later Tuesday.
Volunteers, meanwhile, removed thousands of bouquets of flowers mourners have left near the cafe over the past week, ahead of predicted rainy weather. The flowers will be turned into mulch that officials hope to use at a permanent memorial site, while cards and letters left to honor Johnson and Dawson will be preserved in memory books for their families.
The permanent memorial will be set up after officials consult with the families, New South Wales Premier Mike Baird said.
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