Otago Daily Times

Donations flow for family to return cricketer’s body

- GEORGE BLOCK george.block@odt.co.nz

THE community has rallied around the widow and young daughter of a Dunedin cricketer who died suddenly during a match, and enough money has already been raised to get his body back to India for burial.

Hareesh Gangadhara­n (33) collapsed on the field while playing for his Green Island club side at Sunnyvale on Saturday, after suffering what is now understood to have been a heart attack.

Despite the frantic efforts of players, spectators and emergency services he could not be revived, and died on the field.

He leaves behind wife Nisha Hareesh, and their 3yearold daughter, Gowri, along with friends and colleagues baffled by his death, seemingly out of the blue.

According to Hindu custom, Mr Hareesh, a Malayali from the southern Indian state of Kerala, must be repatriate­d and buried, rather than cremated, as his father is still alive.

Dunedin Malayali Associatio­n head Roy Augustine said about $21,000 in donations had now been received, above the $19,000 quoted by an undertaker to return the body to India.

However, a further $14,000 (based on a $16,000 quote for return flights for four people at short notice) was now needed to get Nisha, Gowri and two others to Mr Hareesh’s home city of Kochi.

Mr Augustine said members of the Malayali community had contribute­d generously, as had many at Dunedin Hospital, where Nisha works as an intensive care nurse, and many of Mr Hareesh’s teammates from his second grade club side ‘‘Super Chunkz’’.

‘‘Everyone has been very helpful.’’

‘‘Nisha’s intensive care colleagues did such a good job.’’

Nisha was doing well in the circumstan­ces, he said.

They were having issues verifying a page with Give alittle.co.nz but were still accepting donations to a Dunedin Malayali Associatio­n account.

A Account — 02 0912 0341553 000 (BNZ)

A Reference — DMA support

 ??  ?? Hareesh Gangadhara­n
Hareesh Gangadhara­n

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