Details of what happened when Iranian-born Man Monis took customers and staff hostage at the Lindt chocolate cafe in Martin Place on December 15 have not been released, with survivors advised by the authorities against telling their stories before enquiries have ended.
"We had to beg for our lives, he was going to shoot someone," one woman says in a promotional clip for a yet-to-air television interview about the 16-and-a-half hour ordeal.
The siege ended with heavily armed police storming the high-end cafe in the early hours of the following morning, after about 10 of the 17 hostages had managed to escape.
Two hostages died in the shoot-out -- cafe manager Tori Johnson, 34, and barrister and mother-of-three Katrina Dawson, 38 -- and several more sustained gunshot wounds.
Reports have suggested that Monis, a 50-year-old self-styled Islamic cleric, shot Johnson as he tried to wrestle his weapon from him but that Dawson was struck by police bullets, possibly a ricochet when police stormed the cafe.
It also raised questions about how Monis, who had a long criminal history, was let out on bail given that charges against him included sexual offences and abetting the murder of his ex-wife.
In the hours after the drama, Prime Minister Tony Abbott ordered an urgent enquiry into why the deranged Islamic gunman was not under surveillance and how he had obtained citizenship.
The month before the siege Monis had posted a message in Arabic on his website pledging allegiance to "the Caliph of the Muslims", which some interpreted as the Islamic State group.
The aim of the inquest will be to determine how the deaths occurred, the factors that contributed to them and whether they could have been prevented.
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