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			 As memorial services were held for the two victims of the 16-hour 
			siege a week ago, Abbott warned that the public needed to remain 
			alert as the country headed into Christmas and New Year 
			celebrations. 
 "The national security agencies today indicated that there has been 
			a heightened level of terrorist chatter in the aftermath of the 
			Martin Place siege," Abbott told reporters in Sydney.
 
 Man Haron Monis, a self-styled sheikh, held hostages at gunpoint at 
			the Lindt Chocolate Cafe in Martin Place, a central Sydney shopping 
			and office precinct, from mid-morning on Monday last week.
 
 Two hostages, cafe manager Tori Johnson and lawyer Katrina Dawson, 
			were killed along with Monis when police stormed the cafe. An 
			official investigation into the final moments of the siege and the 
			deaths of all three is underway.
 
 
			 
			"I'm alerting people to the fact that the terror level remains high 
			and at this level an attack is likely," Abbott said.
 
 Police have said they would be boosting their presence at prominent 
			locations such as Sydney Harbour, home to the Opera House, over the 
			Christmas period.
 
 Several of the 17 hostages taken by Monis attended the funeral 
			service for 34-year-old Johnson at a church just meters away from 
			the cafe. New South Wales (NSW) state Premier Mike Baird and Police 
			Commissioner Andrew Scipione also joined mourners, who included 
			Johnson's partner of 14 years.
 
 A quote from philosopher Rumi under a photo of Johnson graced the 
			cover of the funeral booklet: "Outside the ideas of wrong-doing and 
			right-doing, there is a field. I will meet you there."
 
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			More than 1,000 people attended a separate memorial service for 
			38-year-old Dawson at her alma mater, Sydney University. Her three 
			children, aged four, six and eight, each chose a song for the 
			service: "Santa Claus is Coming to Town", "Somewhere over the 
			Rainbow", and "The Gambler" respectively.
 A huge carpet of thousands of bouquets of flowers in Martin Place 
			was removed early on Tuesday as thunderstorms threatened to drench 
			the city. The flowers will be crushed into mulch and scattered at a 
			site to be determined.
 
 Meanwhile, NSW state opposition leader John Robertson resigned after 
			coming under pressure when it was revealed he signed a letter to 
			support Monis gaining access to his children in a dispute with his 
			second wife.
 
 (Editing by Robert Birsel)
 
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