this has been going for a while now
got to love Media reporting
<http://www.news.com.au/story/0,27574,25447507-401,00.html>
'Rambo' gunman 'ready to die' in New Zealand, Napier siege
ank brought in as Napier siege continues
Officer still lies where he as shot dead
Suspect described as "one-man army"
A TANK has been called in as police try to end a siege that has brought a New Zealand city to a virtual standstill and left an officer lying dead for over a day outside a suburban house.
The gunman has been holed up in the property in the normally quiet North Island town of Napier since a low-key cannabis raid by police ended in a hail of gunfire yesterday morning (AEST).
Follow up to the minute updates on the siege from the NZ Herald website
Senior Constable Len Snee, 53, was gunned down and police have been unable to retrieve his body , which lies next to his police car, for over 24-hours because it is the line of fire from the house.
A police dog was also shot dead, with two other officers seriously wounded and in hospital.
A neighbour who was apparently known to the suspected shooter, Jan Molenaar, was also hit.
A light armoured vehicle (LAV) has been borrowed from the army but it appears Police Superintendent Sam Hoyle said this afternoon he remains hopeful that the gunman will talk and give himself up..
Supt Hoyle said the "incredibly tense" situation could end in minutes or could go on for days.
He said communications with the gunman Mr Molenaar were ongoing, with negotiators both calling him and him calling officers.
Police are also speaking with Mr Molenaar's friends and associates to try to better understand his motivations.
"One-man army"
Mr Molenaar has been described as a "one-man army" who has accepted he's going to die.
Supt Hoyle said Mr Molenaar was a "complex character" and was prone to mood swings.
He has a great deal of ammunition and has fired at police using more than one calibre of bullet indicating he has several weapons.
Friends of Mr Molenaar told the Dominion Post newspaper he had been a territorial soldier attached to the armoured corps from 1982-88.
They described him as a "one-man army" and a "nightmare waiting to happen".
"The guy is a total Rambo, OK? I've never met another person that's fitter than him," said a man described as his business partner.
"He's a very good marksman, he's just the wrong person.
"Wrong person, wrong place, wrong time, the police should have f**king known. That's their business."
Others told journalists he had known police had been watching the place and was likely to have wired it with explosives.
"There's enough there to take that house off the face of the planet," his friend Tony Moore told the newspaper.
But Mr Moore said Mr Molenaar had acted as if he intended to die when saying goodbye to his partner, who left the property a short time after the siege began.
"He said 'Goodbye, hon', had a good blubber about it, and then: 'Best you go.'
"So he's already accepted his fate."
Terririfed town
Schools and businesses in the area of the siege have been ordered shut and people evacuated from the surrounding area.
People living in houses visible from the siege house have been told not to stay inside and keep away from the windows.