Aiyathurai Nadesan Explained

Aiyathurai Nadesan

Aiyathurai Nadesan, a prominent and veteran minority Sri Lankan Tamil journalist[1] was shot dead on 31 May 2004 on his way to work in eastern Sri Lankan town of Batticaloa by gunmen belonging to an armed paramilitary group widely believed to be so called Karuna Group.[2]

Biography

Nadesan, the father of four children and aged 50 at the time of his death, hailed from Nelliyadi, a town in North Jaffna District in Sri Lanka. He wrote under the pen name Nellai Nadesan.

Large crowds attended Nadesan's funeral on 3 June 2004 in his hometown. The normal life of Nelliyady, came to a standstill. Shops were closed. The hearse was taken to the Nelliyady Madhya Maha Vidiyalayam Thursday morning from his residence where funeral orations were delivered by Tamil National Alliance parliamentarians, LTTE activists and Sunanda Deshapriya of the Free Media Movement. A protest demonstration was held in Colombo on 9 June 2004, condemning Nadesan's killing, and a one-day shutdown was observed in the town of Trincomalee. Police have yet to make any arrests in his death.[3]

Career

He was the vice-president of the Sri Lanka Tamil Media Alliance and a recipient of the Best Journalist of 2000 Prize awarded by the Sri Lanka Editors' Guild. He was the Batticaloa based columnist for Virakesari, the country's leading Tamil language newspaper, for more than twenty years.

And also he was the local correspondent for Shakthi TV News and the London based International Broadcasting Corporation. For being a prominent member of the local press, Nadesan received the prize for the best Tamil journalist in 2000.

Past incidents of intimidation

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Tamil journalist gunned down in east of country . 20 January 2016 . Reporters Without Borders . 30 August 2020 .
  2. Web site: Human Rights Watch accuses Karuna group in Nadesan's death . 26 September 2006 . 28 July 2012 . https://archive.today/20120728172233/hrw.org/english/docs/2005/01/13/slanka9854.htm . dead .
  3. http://www.ifex.org/en/content/view/full/72464 Journalists' murders still unpunished