K. S. Raja

K. S. Raja
கே. எஸ். ராஜா
Born Jaffna
Died 1994 September 03
Colombo
Occupation Journalist
Notable credit(s) Popular Radio Journalist
Religion Hindu

K. S. Raja (also spelled K. S. Rajah, Tamil: கே.எஸ்.ராஜா, full name Kandiah Sriskandarajah, கனகரத்தினம் ஸ்ரீஸ்கந்தராஜா) was a very popular Radio Ceylon radio announcer from Sri Lanka. He was popular with his audiences in both Sri Lanka and in Tamil Nadu in India. During the course of the Sri Lankan civil war, he was killed by EPDP given poison in 1996

Biography

He was born in a town called Theldeniya (see here) in the [Kandy District to upper class minority Sri Lankan Tamil parents and grew up in Kotatadi, Jaffna. His father was a doctor and had three sisters and a brother. His two sisters are surgeons and the brother Somas a famous architect. He entered university to do engineering but dropped out to be a radio announcer.

Career in Radio Ceylon

He was a pioneering announcer in the Tamil language known for his melodious voice and innovative programs. His programs were popular in the state of Tamil Nadu in India.[1]

His death

After the 1983 Black July anti-minority pogrom he briefly moved to India and was involved with the Tamil militant group Eelam People's Revolutionary Liberation Front (EPRLF). Subsequent to the Indo-Sri Lanka peace accord in 1987, he returned to his former job in Radio Ceylon now known as Sri Lanka Broadcasting Corporation.

With the resumption of hostilities between the government of Sri Lanka and the main rebel group Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam(LTTE) he was abducted by unknown persons and found murdered in a Colombo beach.[2]

Controversy

According to a former member of a political party and a paramilitary group known as the Eelam People's Democratic Party(EPDP) which in itself was a pro government splinter group from the EPRLF that K. S. Raja was once part of, K. S. Raja was killed by orders of Douglas Devananda the leader of EPDP.[2]

When Douglas Devanada was asked about his involvement in the murder of K. S. Raja, he did not directly deny the responsibility or answer the question, instead pointed to other journalists allegedly killed by LTTE.[3]

See also

References

External links

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