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82-year-old hostage tells how he made his daring escape from Sydney cafe

John O'Brien believes that if he did not act, he and all the others held captive in a Sydney cafe would have ended up dead, so he ran for it

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John O'Brien (left) and Stefan Belafoutis find safety. Photo: AFP

The siege at the Sydney cafe had been going on for more than five hours and 82-year-old John O'Brien had become convinced the gunman was insane and the hostages would likely all end up dead.

And so he made a decision, one he knew came with a cost: he was going to try to escape.

O'Brien - a former tennis professional who played at Wimbledon - looked at the gunman who was at the other end of the cafe, barricaded behind tables and chairs. The man had forced two or three young women to stand in front of him as human shields, so police snipers couldn't take shots at him.

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O'Brien glanced up at Stefan Balafoutis, a lawyer, who was standing, as ordered, with his hands against the window. The younger man had his eyes closed.

"I said to the barrister, look, this is not going to end well, this guy will never get out of here alive, and he's going to take everyone with him," O'Brien said in the first detailed account coming from a hostage who was held inside the cafe.

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He whispered his escape plan to Balafoutis. The lawyer replied: "Good idea."

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