The Borneo Post

Man who confronted bomber at church door remembered

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BATTICALOA, Sri Lanka: Ramesh Raju has become a hero to the shell-shocked congregati­on of the Zion evangelica­l church in Batticaloa after he died stopping a suicide bomber who was bent on killing hundreds of people.

Nearly a week after the bombing, the road leading to Raju’s house in the eastern city is flanked by posters and photograph­s of the 40-year-old father of two who blocked the attacker at the church door.

A stream of well-wishers queue to express condolence­s to his widow, a Sunday school teacher.

Raju was one of 29 people, including 14 children, that media reports say died in the blast at Zion, one of three churches and three hotels targeted by Jihadist bombers.

But about 600 people who were inside at the time escaped the human bomb. The dead from the other two churches make up the majority of the 253 overall death toll.

“When he felt suspicious about the bomber he could have run away to safety but I think he chose to scuffle with him in order to stop him from entering the church,” his father Velusami Raju told AFP.

“I feel very proud that he saved so many lives, especially so many children,” he added.

The east coast city is thought to have become a target as the National Thowheeth Jama’ath (NTJ) blamed for the attacks came from the region.

Zion church was packed at the time and there were dozens of children fresh from Sunday school. Raju had volunteere­d to help manage the crowds, according to witnesses.

When he spotted an unfamiliar man carrying two huge bags, Raju confronted hm and asked him to leave them outside. The bomb went off during the argument.

A number of other children and parents who were outside at the time were killed along with him.

“He was a very good man,” said Raju’s father, who described his eldest son as the “pillar” of their large family.

“Every memory we shared is so precious... He was the main support for our family, for his three younger sisters and younger brother,” the 63-year-old said.

Father and son spoke just minutes before the explosion, Velusami said. Raju promised to call him back once the service was over.

The next time his phone rang, it was a parishione­r calling to tell him his son had been killed in a blast.

Raju’s younger sister also died in the bombing, along with her husband and 20-month-old son.

“I have lost my grandson but at the same time I feel so proud that my son saved so many children, so other families don’t have to go through what we are going through,” the retired mill worker said, choking back tears. — AFP

 ??  ?? Velusami Raju, father of the Zion Church suicide blast victim Ramesh Raju, looks on next to a banner displaying Raju Ramesh’s portrait at his house, in Kattankudy. — AFP photo
Velusami Raju, father of the Zion Church suicide blast victim Ramesh Raju, looks on next to a banner displaying Raju Ramesh’s portrait at his house, in Kattankudy. — AFP photo

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